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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 10 March 1911</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>19110310</dc:date>
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                <p>
l. <lb />
The Carolina Borne and and The Eastern Reflector.<lb />
NEWS ITEMS TAKEN FROM OUR <lb />
EXCHANGES TODAY <lb />
CONDENSED FOR OUR BUSY READERS <lb />
Minister Challenges Minister In <lb />
by Train Near Sanford <lb />
Man Found Dead Near <lb />
or Suicide in Charlotte <lb />
Hotel. <lb />
Wilmington, Feb. at <lb />
the very edge of the water on Middle <lb />
sound, near Wilmington, the dead <lb />
body of EH Herring, a white man, <lb />
about years of age, was found this <lb />
afternoon by a relative, who was <lb />
searching for him. Herring had been <lb />
working at the farm of his brother- <lb />
in-law near the sound, but last Sun- <lb />
day came to Wilmington, where his <lb />
family resides. There was no com- <lb />
between the two families <lb />
until yesterday and hence Herring <lb />
was not missed as those on the <lb />
sound thought him in Wilmington <lb />
and his family was under the <lb />
that he had returned where <lb />
he had been working. It is believed <lb />
that Herring was intoxicated and <lb />
laid down on the edge of the sound <lb />
and froze to death. He was last seen <lb />
yesterday a week ago. Grass had <lb />
been twisted into a kind of rope and <lb />
wrapped around Herring's body. <lb />
Spencer, Feb. the course <lb />
of a revival held in Spencer <lb />
church during the past week <lb />
Rev. G. W. <lb />
for North Carolina, preached a <lb />
sermon on the peculiar doctrine of <lb />
the church, with particular reference <lb />
to baptism. He challenged any one <lb />
of his hearers to show even one pass- <lb />
age of Scripture wherein the church <lb />
is wrong. Rev. J. L. <lb />
pastor of Spencer Baptist church, has <lb />
issued a public Invitation to Rev. Mr. <lb />
to set a time and place when <lb />
the two ministers may meet and have <lb />
a public discussion of the distinctive <lb />
doctrines differentiating the Baptist <lb />
from the Presbyterian church. It is <lb />
not yet known whether the <lb />
minister can meet the Baptist <lb />
minister as the former was called <lb />
home Sunday night on account of the <lb />
death of a member of his family. <lb />
Sanford, Feb. Howard, a <lb />
white man, was killed and Capt. J. L. <lb />
Jordan, section on the A. <lb />
C. L. had had his left leg cut off at the <lb />
knee by being caught under some <lb />
cars on the A. C. L. yards here at <lb />
o'clock this morning. During the <lb />
night a freight train had derailed <lb />
some cars on the yard near the depot <lb />
and the section force with Capt. <lb />
in charge, were sent here early <lb />
this morning to replace the derailed <lb />
cars, and they had Just started to <lb />
work at them when an engine on the <lb />
west end of the yard hit a long string <lb />
of cars and backed them upon the <lb />
men at work. Howard was mangled <lb />
recognition, his head and the <lb />
whole Hide smashed Into shreds <lb />
Jordan only had his left leg <lb />
caught he, Jumped from the track <lb />
and i was almost completely severed <lb />
at knee.<lb />
A. J. Winn, a traveling salesman of <lb />
May Ellis Company, of New Or- <lb />
leans, is dead the Z. A. <lb />
REGISTERED. <lb />
Origin of Fertilizers. <lb />
Mr. Royster believed that success awaited the <lb />
Manufacturer of Fertilizers who would place quality <lb />
above other considerations. This was Mr. <lb />
idea Twenty-seven years ago and this is his idea <lb />
to-day; the result has been that it requires Eight <lb />
Factories to supply the demand for Royster Fertilizers <lb />
F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY, <lb />
FACTORIES AND SALES OFFICES. <lb />
NORFOLK. VA. TARBORO. N. C. COLUMBIA. C. O. <lb />
MACON, COLUMBUS. MONTGOMERY, ALA. BALTIMORE, MO.<lb />
establishment on North <lb />
Tryon street as a result of a pistol <lb />
shot through his head. The pistol <lb />
was fired at o'clock this morn- <lb />
in room No. of the Leland Ho- <lb />
tel, where the young man was stop- <lb />
ping. He arrived in the city <lb />
day. A woman, known as Louise Ste- <lb />
said to be the wife of the 28- <lb />
year-old man, was thought by Col. <lb />
H. C. Williams, proprietor of the Le- <lb />
land Hotel, to have been in the room <lb />
at the time of the tragedy. She, how- <lb />
ever, stated shortly afterwards, that <lb />
she was in another room and didn't <lb />
even remember hearing the shot- <lb />
Charlotte Chronicle. <lb />
Express Office to Move. <lb />
The building belonging to Mr. <lb />
James Long, two doors south of the <lb />
post office, is being fitted up for the <lb />
Southern Express company. <lb />
WOOD'S SELECTED <lb />
Seed Potatoes <lb />
We are headquarters for <lb />
the best <lb />
Maine-grown, Second <lb />
Crop and Northern- <lb />
grown Seed Potatoes; <lb />
stocks selected and grown <lb />
specially for seed purposes, <lb />
and superior both in quality <lb />
and productiveness. <lb />
Wood's New gives de- <lb />
Seed Catalog script ions <lb />
and full information as to the <lb />
best and most profitable kinds <lb />
to plant, both for early and <lb />
main crop. <lb />
Write prices and Descriptive <lb />
Catalog, mailed free on request. <lb />
T. W. SONS <lb />
Richmond, Va <lb />
WILMINGTON READY <lb />
FOR THE BIG EVENT <lb />
A BIG TIME IS PROMISED. <lb />
Aviation Meet and Industrial Exhibit <lb />
There March 9th to 11th. <lb />
Special to The Reflector. <lb />
Wilmington, Feb. <lb />
this section of North Carolina and <lb />
the upper part of South Carolina, in- <lb />
is growing in the great <lb />
meet to be held on the grounds <lb />
of the Wilmington Driving <lb />
to be known as the East- <lb />
Carolina Pair March <lb />
9th, 10th and 11th, when the <lb />
Exhibition company will have two of <lb />
its celebrated biplanes and <lb />
two or three of its most experienced <lb />
and well known aviators here to make <lb />
daily flights between the hours of <lb />
and p. m. Mr. Frank Herbert, the <lb />
local manager, continues to receive <lb />
reports which indicate that every <lb />
town and village in this section will <lb />
be represented as well as hundreds <lb />
from other points throughout this <lb />
State and South Carolina to witness <lb />
the daring flights of the aviators and <lb />
inspect the numerous exhibits of <lb />
poultry farm products and <lb />
etc., which are promised. There <lb />
Will also be some midway <lb />
of the best kind. The railroads <lb />
have granted a reduced rate on ac- <lb />
count of the gala occasion and <lb />
First Class <lb />
Farm Implements <lb />
You Labor, Time and <lb />
Money when you buy <lb />
that wear well and work <lb />
well. The land that we sell. <lb />
We issue one of the best and <lb />
most complete of Farm <lb />
Catalogs. It gives prices, <lb />
descriptions and much interest- <lb />
information. Mailed free upon <lb />
request <lb />
We are headquarters for <lb />
V. Crimp and other Wire <lb />
Fencing, Barb Wire, Poultry <lb />
Netting, etc. <lb />
Write for Descriptive Catalog and <lb />
prices on any supplies or Farm <lb />
you require. <lb />
The Implement Co. <lb />
1302 East Main St, <lb />
RICHMOND, . . VIRGINIA. <lb />
type to be a machine invented by <lb />
Mr. of this city. Owing <lb />
to these facts there is more than <lb />
common interest in the aviation meet <lb />
to be held here next week. <lb />
Comparative Speeds. <lb />
Two thousand years ago the <lb />
they legions of Rome swept across the <lb />
will bring crowds here, while the country at a gait just about ten times <lb />
people are malting taster than a wagon can traverse <lb />
lions to make the stay of the Stokes county in the year of our Lord <lb />
tors pleasant in every respect. 1911. The Romans had slaves with <lb />
One has been built in which to build their roads, and we <lb />
Wilmington by individuals at a cost are slaves to not build ours. Caesar <lb />
of several thousand dollars and bids was not half such a tyrant as our <lb />
fair to be a success, a few short Mud, while we are bigger fools <lb />
flights having been made several n's Reporter. <lb />
months ago at Beach. <lb />
company has also been formed here A woman always fears she won't <lb />
to manufacture flying machines, the be in time for the bargain sale. <lb />
--M-l <lb />
i. <lb />
Agriculture Is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington.<lb />
Volume <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, MARCH <lb />
Number <lb />
AMERICAN TROOPS ON <lb />
TIER CREATE SENSATION <lb />
MRS. POE DEAD. <lb />
STRONG FEELING <lb />
The Turmoil Is Greater Than at Any <lb />
Time Since the Revolution Started <lb />
Americans Warned to Remain In- <lb />
States Troops <lb />
Wire to The Reflector. <lb />
Mexico City, March <lb />
can soldiers had actually invaded <lb />
Mexico and were now marching on <lb />
the capital, no greater excitement <lb />
could be apparent than that shown <lb />
today over the massing of the United <lb />
States army upon the Mexican <lb />
tier. Coupled with highly censured <lb />
reports of insurrection success in the <lb />
north, and unofficial reports that <lb />
President is ill. all elements <lb />
prevail to make a situation of <lb />
moil greater than at any other time <lb />
since the revolution started last year. <lb />
Anti American feeling ran strong. <lb />
Knots of excited men gathered in <lb />
and denounced Americans. <lb />
Americans were warned by police <lb />
to remain indoors. <lb />
Washington, March troop <lb />
movement to the Mexican border con- <lb />
with unabated vigor. From <lb />
different sections of the country <lb />
trains of troops are now headed to- <lb />
wards Mexico. <lb />
Great activity is also displayed at <lb />
the yards. At the Brooklyn <lb />
yard the cruiser Tennessee, Montana <lb />
and North Carolina are coaling rapid- <lb />
preparatory for sailing for Gal- <lb />
The war department still <lb />
says movement only for <lb />
Mother of Mr. Clarence H. Poe Died <lb />
Yesterday. <lb />
Mrs. William Baxter Poe, of Chat- <lb />
ham county, died yesterday at the <lb />
home of relatives in Georgie. Mrs. <lb />
Poe was the mother of Clarence H. <lb />
Poe, of this city and since Mr. Poe <lb />
has been abroad had together with <lb />
her daughter, Daisy Poe, been <lb />
staying with relatives in Georgia. <lb />
Her only son, Mr. Clarence H. Poe, <lb />
went abroad last summer. He arrived <lb />
in New York City yesterday <lb />
home and there found a telegram tell- <lb />
him of his mother's death. His <lb />
boat was two days overdue, having <lb />
been delayed by rough weather. He <lb />
left New York last night and will <lb />
pass through Raleigh tonight. He will <lb />
be joined here by friends and they <lb />
will meet his mother's remains at <lb />
Sanford. From Sanford the remains <lb />
will be taken to the old home In <lb />
Chatham county for burial. <lb />
Mrs. Poe was a most estimable lady <lb />
and had hosts of friends in this sec- <lb />
who will learn of her death with <lb />
regret. Her husband died <lb />
4th, 1907. <lb />
Much sympathy is felt for the only <lb />
son, whose home-coming has been de- <lb />
of all its joy. There were only <lb />
the two Times, 7th <lb />
inst. <lb />
NEWS ITEMS TAKEN FROM OUR <lb />
EXCHANGES TODAY <lb />
HON. JOHN II. SMALL HURT. <lb />
CONDENSED FOR OUR BUSY READERS <lb />
Changeable. <lb />
As Tuesday afternoon grew old ii <lb />
looked like a regular snow storm ha., <lb />
set in, but about night there was ; <lb />
rise in temperature that turned <lb />
in more rain. <lb />
Meeting Sat., March 11th. <lb />
C. <lb />
M. Rock. <lb />
of minutes. <lb />
Mitchell's <lb />
H. M.<lb />
Sallie Joyner Davis. <lb />
to Study and Teaching <lb />
to H. E. Austin. <lb />
Topics. <lb />
Play at Training School. <lb />
On next Monday evening, 13th, at <lb />
o'clock, the senior class of East <lb />
Carolina Training school <lb />
will present two plays, <lb />
and Proposal Under <lb />
An admission of <lb />
cents will be charged, and the young <lb />
ladies should have a liberal patron- <lb />
age from the people of the town. <lb />
It's very easy to make a good <lb />
and much easier to break it. <lb />
Fire In Lake Shot by <lb />
Guard at Burned <lb />
to Death at <lb />
Let for Link In From <lb />
Charlotte to Kings Mountain. <lb />
Lake View, N. C. March <lb />
persons lost their lives and two <lb />
received serious injuries and <lb />
burns in a fire which occurred early <lb />
today, destroyed the Crystal Ho- <lb />
tel, a tourist resort, just open this <lb />
season. <lb />
This morning while the county con- <lb />
were working on the <lb />
burg road, a few miles from Wilson <lb />
Tom Simms, colored, attempted to <lb />
escape and was through the body <lb />
by Mr. one of the <lb />
guards. The ball entered behind the <lb />
left Times. <lb />
Fayetteville, March Celia <lb />
Utley wife of Major A. A. <lb />
clerk of the court <lb />
Cumberland county, died shortly be- <lb />
fore noon today as the result of <lb />
burns received yesterday morning <lb />
through the accidental catching afire <lb />
of her clothing from an open fire- <lb />
place in her home while preparing <lb />
attend church. As she was alone in <lb />
house at the time of the accident <lb />
Mrs. was enveloped ii. <lb />
before help could reach her. <lb />
Her clothing was entirely consumed <lb />
severe injuries received, <lb />
with the shock of the <lb />
happening proved fatal. <lb />
Weldon, March of tearing <lb />
down the old Atlantic Coast Line <lb />
began here yesterday. A Rocky <lb />
firm has taken the contract ti <lb />
remove the famous old landmark <lb />
ind all the timbers in the building <lb />
Will be taken to Rocky Mount. <lb />
is one of the largest frame hotel <lb />
Struck and Dragged by Trolley <lb />
Car. <lb />
Trenton, N. J. March <lb />
man John H. Small, of North Caro- <lb />
who spoke at tonight's dinner <lb />
of the chamber of commerce in <lb />
ton was struck by a trolley car here <lb />
this afternoon while alighting from <lb />
an automobile. He was dragged about <lb />
fifteen feet on the fonder of the car <lb />
but when examined by a physician <lb />
was thought not to be seriously <lb />
ed. The congressman In alighting <lb />
from the automobile which brought <lb />
him from the railroad station to the <lb />
chamber of commerce building got <lb />
out on the wrong side and did not <lb />
notice the approaching trolley car. <lb />
buildings in North Carolina and was <lb />
erected long before the war between <lb />
the States. <lb />
Miss Perry and Mrs. Mel. <lb />
Pope narrowly escaped death Monday <lb />
evening about when a Southern <lb />
railway shifting engine and a draft <lb />
of cars run them down at the Chapel <lb />
Hill street crossing, completely de- <lb />
their vehicle and badly in- <lb />
Miss Perry. The buggy was <lb />
carried some distance, and that Mrs. <lb />
Pope escaped without injury is con- <lb />
miraculous. Miss Berry <lb />
thrown from the buggy and received <lb />
bruises about her body and face. <lb />
Durham Sun. . <lb />
The contract for the first link in <lb />
big line to be <lb />
by the Southern Power Company <lb />
been let to Stewart Jones of <lb />
Baltimore. The link will run from <lb />
to Kings Mountain a <lb />
of miles, and contract <lb />
alls for its completion in working <lb />
lays. The bid was There <lb />
be a l per cent, compensated <lb />
grade, and 80-pound rails will be <lb />
The link will run via Mount <lb />
lolly and Gastonia. contract <lb />
or the next link, from Greenwood to <lb />
s. C., distance of <lb />
will be let In Greenville the <lb />
part of the week. There are <lb />
local matters to adjust before <lb />
he contract for the link bet en <lb />
and Kings Mountain is <lb />
et. <lb />
You can tell how much one<lb />
r-<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018138_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
THEY HELPED THE SCHOOL <lb />
Young Lady Teachers Hold u Basket <lb />
Party. <lb />
Grifton. M. C. March 1911. <lb />
Editor <lb />
As this is the great educational <lb />
fa of the life of our progressive <lb />
I write you this hoping you <lb />
will print the same to show the great <lb />
enterprise on the part of two of our <lb />
lady teachers in proving that where <lb />
there is a will there is a way. They <lb />
developed the idea to make a way <lb />
to get the means to continue the <lb />
school period five or six weeks <lb />
than the appropriation would justify. <lb />
Having the school interest at <lb />
they put their heads together and by <lb />
diligent work got up an entertain- <lb />
at the school house, by calling <lb />
on the patrons and others who are <lb />
friendly to educational interests and <lb />
had what is known as a basket party <lb />
which was well patronized by the <lb />
community. <lb />
Now the people of the little town <lb />
of Clay Root, a neighbor of Vance- <lb />
under the direction of these <lb />
teachers-Miss Jessie V. Coward <lb />
principal and Miss Virginia Ives as- <lb />
together baskets which <lb />
sold for and a cake which <lb />
brought more, making in all <lb />
We take off our hats to the young <lb />
ladies for their splendid work. Mr. <lb />
Thomas Davis, of New Bern, gave <lb />
them material assistance in the en- <lb />
I write this, Mr. Editor, because <lb />
I know you will be glad to show <lb />
other districts how they may increase <lb />
the length of their school term <lb />
when the public funds give out, and <lb />
in a way that will give all the pa- <lb />
enjoyment. <lb />
VANDERBILT. <lb />
Legal Notices <lb />
Funeral of Mr. W. King. <lb />
A great concourse of people showed <lb />
their esteem of the late Mr. W. M. <lb />
King in attending his funeral Sun- <lb />
day. The body was taken under Ma- <lb />
sonic escort from his late residence <lb />
to the church, where <lb />
service was conducted by Rev. W. <lb />
O. and then taken to the <lb />
burial ground in Falkland town- <lb />
ship and interred with Masonic hon- <lb />
ors. Masons from Greenville and <lb />
several neighboring towns took part <lb />
in the ceremony. The floral tributes <lb />
were numerous and beautiful. <lb />
ENTRY OF VACANT LAND. <lb />
State of North Carolina, <lb />
Pitt county. <lb />
We, Robert Brown and S. S. Smith, <lb />
enter and claim a certain or <lb />
parcel of land situated in Greenville <lb />
township, Pitt county, beginning at <lb />
H. L. Coward's, Willoughby's <lb />
and Lang's corner, running south <lb />
with the Willoughby line to James <lb />
May's corner, thence with May's line <lb />
to B. B. land, thence with <lb />
line to H. L. Coward's line, <lb />
thence with Coward's line to the be- <lb />
ginning, containing twenty-five acres, <lb />
more or less. <lb />
This 16th day of February, 1911. <lb />
ROBERT BROWN, <lb />
S. S. SMITH. <lb />
Any and all persons claiming title <lb />
to or interest in the above <lb />
land must file with me their protest <lb />
in writing within the next days or <lb />
they will be barred by law. <lb />
This 16th day of February, 1911. <lb />
W. M. MOORE, <lb />
Entry Taker, <lb />
ltd <lb />
WITHOUT <lb />
Subject for the Men's Prayer League <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
At the Men's Prayer League held <lb />
in the Baptist church, Sunday after- <lb />
noon, Self for the Sake o <lb />
was the subject for discus- <lb />
and Messrs. T. R. Moore and <lb />
T. Dupree made good talks on <lb />
it. Mr. J. A. Lang, the other <lb />
pointed leader, was necessarily out <lb />
of town and his place was taken by <lb />
Rev. C. M. Rock. Mr. Lang being <lb />
appointed again for net Sunday. <lb />
The meeting next Sunday will be <lb />
in the Methodist church. Subject, <lb />
Without Text, I <lb />
Leaders, Messrs. J. A. <lb />
Lang, B. II. Thomas and Wiley J. <lb />
Brown. <lb />
LEARN AUTOMOBILE <lb />
Take a thirty days practical course <lb />
in our well equipped Machine Shops <lb />
and learn the Automobile bushiest <lb />
and accept good positions. <lb />
CHARLOTTE AUTO SCHOOL, <lb />
Charlotte, N. C, <lb />
NOTICE OF SALE. <lb />
By virtue of a power of sale con- <lb />
in a certain mortgage deed, <lb />
executed to me as mortgagee, and <lb />
bearing date January 1899, by S. <lb />
E. Gainer and wife, Delia Gainer, <lb />
and duly recorded in the public reg- <lb />
of Pitt county, in Book K-C, at <lb />
page to the payment of <lb />
a certain therein mentioned, <lb />
and the stipulations in said <lb />
gage deed not having been complied <lb />
with, and at the request of I. H. and <lb />
W. J. Little, assignees of Margaret <lb />
Manning, assignee of said mortgage, <lb />
I shall, on Tuesday afternoon, at <lb />
o'clock, March 1911, at the court <lb />
house door in Greenville, North <lb />
Carolina, offer at public sale, to the <lb />
highest bidder, for cash, the follow- <lb />
described property, <lb />
Being one house and lot in the <lb />
town of Bethel, N. C. and situate <lb />
on the corner of West James and <lb />
Pleasant streets in said town, and be- <lb />
ginning on the corner of said streets, <lb />
thence with Pleasant street yards, <lb />
thence parallel with James street, a <lb />
southerly course yards, thence a <lb />
line parallel with the first line <lb />
to James street, thence with <lb />
James to the beginning, and <lb />
containing 1-2 acre, more or less. <lb />
This Feb. 1911. <lb />
D. W. COREY, <lb />
i. H. and W. J. LITTLE, Assignees. <lb />
Dunning Smith, <lb />
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT. <lb />
North County. <lb />
J. G. administrator of <lb />
George Forbes, deceased, <lb />
vs. <lb />
Jane Forbes, George Forbes, <lb />
and Mahala Forbes. <lb />
The defendants George and <lb />
Mahala Forbes above named, will <lb />
take That an action entitled <lb />
as above has been commenced in the <lb />
Superior court of Pitt county, to sell <lb />
the land of the late George Forbes <lb />
to make assets for the payment of <lb />
his debts; said defendants being heirs <lb />
at law of the said George Forbes, <lb />
deceased, and the said two defend- <lb />
ants will further take notice that <lb />
they are required to appear before <lb />
the clerk of the Superior court of <lb />
Pitt county, at his office, in the town <lb />
of Greenville, North Carolina, on the <lb />
3rd day of April, 1911, and answer <lb />
or demur to the complaint and <lb />
filed in said action, or the <lb />
plaintiff will apply to the court for <lb />
relief demanded in said com- <lb />
plaint. <lb />
the day of February, <lb />
1911. <lb />
D. C. MOORE, <lb />
Clerk of Superior <lb />
F. G. James Son, <lb />
for plaintiff ltd <lb />
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, <lb />
Department of State. <lb />
MORTGAGEE'S SALE. <lb />
By virtue of authority of a <lb />
gage deed, executed to me by Thomas <lb />
H. Bowen and Fannie V. Bowen, on <lb />
the 30th day of December, 1908, and <lb />
duly recorded in the register's office <lb />
of Pitt county, in Book D-9, page <lb />
to secure the payment of a certain <lb />
bond bearing even date therewith, <lb />
and the stipulations in said mortgage <lb />
not having been complied with, I shall <lb />
expose at public auction, for cash, <lb />
on Saturday, the 19th day of <lb />
1911, at the court house door in <lb />
Greenville, Pitt county, the following <lb />
In Beaver Dam township, lying on <lb />
Little creek, beginning <lb />
at Adams bridge across said creek, <lb />
and running thence with said Con- <lb />
creek to the line between <lb />
the May place and the Flanagan place <lb />
thence with the lines of the May <lb />
place and Flanagan place to the <lb />
Greenville and Snow Hill road; <lb />
thence with said road to Adams <lb />
bridge, the beginning, containing <lb />
acres, more or less, and being <lb />
all the May place which lies on the <lb />
north side of the Greenville and Snow <lb />
Hill road. <lb />
This February 16th, 1911. <lb />
A. E. TUCKER <lb />
S. J. Everett, <lb />
Attorney. <lb />
Mortgagee, <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Letters of administration upon the <lb />
estate of I. S. Owens, deceased, <lb />
this day been issued to the <lb />
by the clerk of the Superior <lb />
court of Pitt county, notice is hereby <lb />
given to all persons holding claim <lb />
against said estate to present them <lb />
to for payment on or before the <lb />
13th day of February, 1912, or this <lb />
notice will be plead in bar of their <lb />
recovery. All persons indebted to <lb />
said estate are requested to make <lb />
mediate payment to us. <lb />
This the 11th day of February, <lb />
1911. <lb />
W. D. OWENS, <lb />
J. B. GARDNER, <lb />
Administratrix of the estate of I. S. <lb />
Owens, deceased. <lb />
Blow, Attorneys. ltd <lb />
Stray Taken Up. <lb />
I have taken up a black female <lb />
hog, weight about pounds, in <lb />
poor condition, marked two slits in <lb />
each ear. Owner can get same by <lb />
proving ownership and paying <lb />
M. D. LEWIS, <lb />
Conetoe, N. C. <lb />
SALE OF REAL ESTATE. <lb />
North Carolina, <lb />
Pitt County. <lb />
By virtue of a power of sale con- <lb />
in a certain mortgage deed ex- <lb />
and delivered by W. H. Smith <lb />
and wife Ada Smith to F. C. Harding, <lb />
dated 27th day of January, 1908, and <lb />
duly recorded in the Register's office <lb />
of Pitt County, in book Z-8, page <lb />
the undersigned will on Monday, the <lb />
20th day if March, 1911, at o'clock, <lb />
noon, it being the first day of the <lb />
Term of Pitt County Superior <lb />
Court, expose to public sale before <lb />
the Court door in Greenville, <lb />
to the highest bidder for cash, the <lb />
following described or parcel <lb />
of land, to <lb />
Lying and in Pitt County, <lb />
North Carolina, in Township, <lb />
adjoining the lands cf the Beaufort <lb />
County Lumber Company, the lands <lb />
of J. B. Smith, the lands of W. L. <lb />
Smith and Blount Adams, containing <lb />
acres more or less and being the <lb />
identical or parcel land whereon <lb />
W. H. Smith and wife resided on the <lb />
day of January, 1908. This sale <lb />
is made to satisfy the terms of said <lb />
mortgage deed. <lb />
This the 11th day of February, 1911. <lb />
r, WHITE, Assignee. <lb />
F C. HARDING, Attorney. <lb />
U-d <lb />
CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION <lb />
To All to Whom These May <lb />
Whereas, It appears to my <lb />
faction, by duly authenticated record <lb />
of the proceedings for the voluntary <lb />
dissolution thereof by the unanimous <lb />
consent of all the stockholders, de- <lb />
posited in my office, that The Build- <lb />
Lumber Company, a Corpora <lb />
of this State whose principal <lb />
office is situated at No.---------Street, <lb />
in the city of Greenville, county of <lb />
Pitt, State of North Carolina J. <lb />
Cobb being the agent therein and <lb />
in charge thereof, upon whom pro- <lb />
may be has complied <lb />
with the requirements Of Chapter <lb />
of 1905, entitled <lb />
preliminary to the issuing of <lb />
this Certificate of <lb />
Now, Therefore, I. J. Bryan Grimes, <lb />
secretary of State of the State of <lb />
North Carolina, do hereby certify <lb />
that the said corporation did, on the <lb />
12th day of December, 1910, file in <lb />
my office a duly executed and attested <lb />
consent in writing to the dissolution <lb />
of said corporation, executed by all <lb />
the stockholders thereof, which said <lb />
consent and record of the proceed- <lb />
aforesaid are now on file in my <lb />
said office as by <lb />
In Testimony Whereof, I have here- <lb />
to set my hand and affixed <lb />
seal, at Raleigh, this the 12th <lb />
day of December, A. D. 1910. <lb />
J. BRYAN <lb />
Secretary of State. <lb />
NOTICE TO CREDITORS. <lb />
Having qualified as administrator <lb />
of George Forbes, deceased, late of <lb />
Pitt county, North Carolina, this is <lb />
to notify all persons having claims <lb />
against the estate of said deceased <lb />
to exhibit them to the undersigned <lb />
within twelve from His <lb />
date, or this notice will be pleaded <lb />
in bar of their recovery. All per- <lb />
sons indebted Jo said estate will <lb />
please make immediate payment. <lb />
This February 1911. <lb />
J. G. <lb />
F G. James Son, Administrator. <lb />
Attorneys. ltd <lb />
SI rayed. <lb />
C small size, red color, <lb />
horns, marked crap and slit <lb />
in right oar. fiend information to <lb />
G. <lb />
R. F. D. No. Greenville, N. C. <lb />
As I am anxious to close up my <lb />
business here. All parties holding ac- <lb />
counts against me will please <lb />
sent R. TOWNSEND. <lb />
ltd 3.3 <lb />
People think potatoes and try to <lb />
talk roses. <lb />
Stray Taken Up. <lb />
I have taken up one heifer, <lb />
light brown with white spots <lb />
body and forehead, unmarked. Been <lb />
with my stock about months. <lb />
can get same by identifying <lb />
and paying charges. <lb />
H. H. CRAFT, <lb />
R. F. D. No. Winterville, N. G <lb />
ltd <lb />
Kills A Murderer. <lb />
Merciless murderer is <lb />
with many but Dr. King's <lb />
Mew Life Pills kill it by prevention. <lb />
They gently stimulate the stomach, <lb />
liver and bowels, preventing that <lb />
clogging that invites appendicitis, <lb />
constipation, headache, <lb />
chills. at all drug- <lb />
gists. <lb />
Prof. at New Bern. <lb />
Mr. W. H. superintendent <lb />
of the Pitt county schools, address- <lb />
ed the teachers on the subject of <lb />
and his re- <lb />
marks were well timed and received <lb />
the strict attention of his entire <lb />
A class of pupils from the <lb />
7th grade of the Dover High school <lb />
present and gave <lb />
in mathematic recitations. <lb />
These were in charge of Superintend- <lb />
Moser who is also a member of <lb />
the faculty of the Training <lb />
School at Greenville, N. C.-New <lb />
Bern Journal. <lb />
Even watered stocks have been <lb />
known to take a drop too much. <lb />
In spite of men most women's souls <lb />
stay pure. <lb />
The Carolina Home Earn The Eastern <lb />
ESTABLISHED to <lb />
S M <lb />
Wholesale and retail Grocer and <lb />
Furniture dealer. Cash paid for <lb />
Hide, Fur, Cotton Seed, Oil Barrels. <lb />
Turkey, Eggs, Oak Bedsteads, Mat- <lb />
etc. Suits. Baby Carriages, <lb />
Go-Carts. Parlor Suits, Tables, <lb />
Lounges Safes, P. and Gail <lb />
Ax Snuff, High Life Tobacco, Key <lb />
West Cheroots, Henry George Ci- <lb />
gars, Canned Cherries, Peaches, <lb />
Syrup. Jelly, Meat, Flour, <lb />
Coffee, Soap, Lye, Magic Food, Mat- <lb />
Oil Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls <lb />
Garden Seeds Oranges, Apples, Nuts <lb />
Candies, Dried Apples, Peaches <lb />
Prunes, Currants, Raisins, Glass <lb />
and <lb />
and Crackers, Cheese <lb />
best Butter, New Royal Sewing Ma- <lb />
chines, numerous other goods <lb />
Quality and quantity for cash <lb />
Come to gee me. <lb />
Phone Number <lb />
S M <lb />
WHAT THE STATE <lb />
INSTITUTIONS WILL GET <lb />
THE AMOUNT REACHES <lb />
These appropriations only covered <lb />
about one-third of what was asked <lb />
for the different institutions. <lb />
NATIONAL PROGRESSIVE <lb />
REPUBLICAN LEAGUE<lb />
AGRICULTURAL TRAINS. <lb />
The <lb />
Water Supply for the <lb />
Country <lb />
No matter where you live, or how <lb />
situated, you may have every con- <lb />
of a city water supply by <lb />
the use of a <lb />
AIR PRESSURE WATER SYSTEM <lb />
under pressure for kitchen, <lb />
laundry, sprinkling lawn <lb />
and garden, watering stock and for <lb />
fire protection. <lb />
An air-tight steel tank in the base- <lb />
or in an out house, stores the <lb />
water as it is pumped by hand or <lb />
power and forces it through the pipes <lb />
and faucets by compressed air in the <lb />
tipper portion of the taint. No <lb />
or attic tank to freeze and be- <lb />
come stagnant. Water kept cool, <lb />
clean and pure. ., <lb />
If you want anything of the kind, <lb />
see me and I can make you low prices <lb />
on the complete system installed in <lb />
your home or farm. <lb />
L. H. PENDER <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Choice Cut Flowers <lb />
and Violets <lb />
and artistically <lb />
ranged at short notice. <lb />
Mail, Telegraph and Telephone or <lb />
promptly filled by <lb />
J. L CO., <lb />
Phone No. <lb />
Central Barber Shop <lb />
HERBERT EDMONDS <lb />
Proprietor <lb />
Located in business i f town, <lb />
four chair-in operation ard <lb />
one presided over by a ski d <lb />
Ladies waited it their home. <lb />
How This is Appropriated by <lb />
Legislature. <lb />
The appropriations bill adopted by <lb />
the general assembly makes the fol- <lb />
lowing provision for the various State <lb />
institutions for the next two <lb />
For the Home at Raleigh. <lb />
maintenance, out <lb />
of which is to be paid the present de- <lb />
For the School for the Deaf and <lb />
Dumb at Morganton, annually <lb />
for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for installing water system; <lb />
annually for equipment. <lb />
For the Colored Orphan Asylum at <lb />
Oxford, annually for <lb />
and maintenance. <lb />
For the Appalachian Training <lb />
School at Boone, annually for <lb />
support and maintenance; an- <lb />
for equipment. <lb />
For the Normal and Industrial <lb />
school at <lb />
ally for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for support and main- <lb />
For the Institution for Deaf, Dumb <lb />
and Blind at Raleigh, annual- <lb />
for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for library incidentals. <lb />
For the Hospital for the Colored <lb />
race at Goldsboro; annually <lb />
I for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for improvements. <lb />
For the State hospital at Raleigh, <lb />
annually for support and <lb />
maintenance. <lb />
For the State hospital at Morgan- <lb />
ton, annually for support and <lb />
maintenance, fire escapes to be pro- <lb />
out of this sum. <lb />
For the Stonewall Jackson Train- <lb />
School at Concord, an- <lb />
for maintenance; an- <lb />
for improvements. <lb />
For East Carolina Train- <lb />
School at Greenville, an- <lb />
for support and maintenance, <lb />
out of which the present deficit must <lb />
be paid. <lb />
For the Croatan Normal school in <lb />
county, annually for <lb />
support and maintenance; an- <lb />
for improvements. <lb />
For the University at Chapel Hill, <lb />
annually for support and <lb />
maintenance; annually for <lb />
four years for improvements. <lb />
For the Normal and Industrial Col- <lb />
at Greensboro, annually <lb />
for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for improvement. <lb />
For the College of Agriculture and <lb />
Mechanic Arts at Raleigh, an- <lb />
for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for improvements. <lb />
For the for <lb />
at annually <lb />
for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for improvements. <lb />
For the Agricultural and Mechanic- <lb />
College, colored, at Greensboro, <lb />
annually for support and <lb />
maintenance; annually for <lb />
For marking graves of Confederate <lb />
dead in cemetery in Raleigh, an- <lb />
To give weaker public schools of <lb />
the State four term <lb />
annually. <lb />
For Battle Ground, <lb />
annually; annually for erection <lb />
of monuments. <lb />
For the North Carolina room in the <lb />
Confederate museum in Richmond, <lb />
annually. <lb />
The Southern Railway Ag- <lb />
Train. <lb />
TO BE BY <lb />
Prime Object of t Defeat Kr- <lb />
f Tart. <lb />
During the week beginning Mon- <lb />
day, March the Southern Railway <lb />
company, in line with its policy of <lb />
doing everything possible for the bet- <lb />
of agricultural conditions in <lb />
the territory traversed by its lines, <lb />
run two special agricultural <lb />
trains. One of these trains will be <lb />
operated In co-operation with the <lb />
department of agriculture and <lb />
immigration and will spend the en- <lb />
tire week on the Richmond division, <lb />
embracing the lines between Rich- <lb />
and Danville and Richmond and <lb />
West Point. Meetings have been <lb />
ranged at twelve points at which the <lb />
train will stop. The other will be run <lb />
over the lines of the Southern Rail- <lb />
way and the Queen and Crescent <lb />
route in Kentucky co-operation <lb />
with the department of agriculture <lb />
and the college of agriculture of that <lb />
state. Twenty-four stops will be made <lb />
by this train. <lb />
Each of these trains will be in <lb />
charge of parties made up of men of <lb />
scientific knowledge and practical ex- <lb />
who will be able to give in- <lb />
formation of the greatest value. Sub- <lb />
be arranged to meet the <lb />
most pressing needs of the different <lb />
sections visited. Bad weather will not <lb />
be allowed to interfere with the meet- <lb />
as all will be held in the <lb />
coaches which the trains will <lb />
carry. <lb />
The Southern Railway in connect- <lb />
ion with other lines is furnishing ab- <lb />
free of charge a train with <lb />
which the State College of <lb />
of Georgia is making a forty <lb />
seven day tour of the state. The great <lb />
expense entailed by the running these <lb />
trains is borne by the Southern in the <lb />
belief Us interests are identical <lb />
with those of the farmers of the <lb />
south and that it will eventually be <lb />
repaid by the improvements in con- <lb />
that will result from an in- <lb />
creasing adoption of better methods <lb />
of agriculture. <lb />
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb />
Ohio, March key <lb />
note of the National Progressive Re- <lb />
publican League will be sounded here <lb />
tonight by Guilford at a <lb />
banquet of progressive Republicans <lb />
of Ohio. who is one of the <lb />
founders of the league, has Chosen <lb />
for his topic of the Pro- <lb />
Movement. Its Motive and <lb />
Effect Upon The ex-for- <lb />
ester is expected to attack trust's <lb />
policy, conditions which allow the <lb />
to exploit possession of <lb />
the system which now prevails in <lb />
nominations of presidents, etc. His <lb />
attitude on the presidential question <lb />
is of deep interest, as it is reported <lb />
that the primary purpose of the <lb />
league is to defeat the nomination <lb />
of Mr. Taft next year. <lb />
OF INTEREST TO THE SOUTH. <lb />
STOMACH AGONY. <lb />
Take and Quickly Get <lb />
of Indigestion. <lb />
Go to Coward Wooten's today and <lb />
get a cent box of <lb />
tablets. <lb />
Take them as directed and notice <lb />
how quickly distress, gas and <lb />
will disappear. <lb />
stomach tablets not only <lb />
give instant relief, but taken for a <lb />
few days drive away dizziness, head- <lb />
ache, nervousness and <lb />
Bad dreams and tossing about in <lb />
bed are caused by out of order <lb />
and will remove the <lb />
cause and put your stomach in <lb />
did condition in a few days. <lb />
Give a trial at Coward ft <lb />
Wooten's risk, they guarantee it to <lb />
cure any stomach trouble, or money <lb />
back. is a fine tonic, it <lb />
builds up run down people in a short <lb />
time. <lb />
Coward Wooten and druggists <lb />
everywhere sell at cents <lb />
a large box. Write free trial <lb />
sample, Booth's Buffalo, N. <lb />
Y 2-16,28-3.9 <lb />
Even the high isn't always <lb />
above suspicion. <lb />
Knowing what not to say helps <lb />
some. <lb />
Mr. S. Wilbur of the ad- <lb />
firm of K. W. ft Son, <lb />
has, without saying so in so many <lb />
words, expressed the greatest <lb />
in the way of the South's rapid <lb />
growth she is not advertising <lb />
enough nor in the proper way. Ad- <lb />
is Mr. business, <lb />
but every word he uttered in a recent <lb />
Atlanta address was true. <lb />
The writer only the other day had <lb />
this very subject in mind and out of <lb />
curiosity went into two or three <lb />
stores in an endeavor to find a <lb />
cracker different from those of the <lb />
brand, but practically every- <lb />
thing of this kind was found to in <lb />
a package bearing the name of the <lb />
National Biscuit Company, the con- <lb />
that makes the crackers. <lb />
There are numerous cracker factories <lb />
throughout the South, but they are <lb />
not known extensively outside of the <lb />
counties in which they are operated, <lb />
and it is because they do not put <lb />
their goods up in attractive packages <lb />
and advertise them. <lb />
There is no table syrup in the <lb />
world better than could be and is <lb />
being made right here in the South, <lb />
and yet simply because of aggressive <lb />
and attractive advertising by certain <lb />
firms in the West and Northwest we <lb />
do not seem to know how to call for <lb />
anything but their particular brand <lb />
of corn syrup; and if we did call for <lb />
other syrups the grocer would not <lb />
know anything about them. <lb />
There are being made in the South <lb />
good brands of cotton hosiery, <lb />
knit underwear, and shoes as any- <lb />
where in the North, and yet we are <lb />
prompted to call for those that are <lb />
made in New York and <lb />
setts, simply because we see the <lb />
names in almost every and <lb />
newspaper we pick up. <lb />
It is said that Concord, N. C, can <lb />
make enough towels to supply every <lb />
hotel in America, but Concord her- <lb />
self is not known outside the State, to <lb />
say nothing of her towels. <lb />
If one great Industry In North <lb />
Carolina, for Instance, would start an <lb />
advertising campaign like that of say <lb />
Karo corn syrup or hosiery, <lb />
in years the State would show a <lb />
population of This <lb />
of advertising is as vital to a <lb />
great success as buying rolling stock <lb />
and machinery and building plants, <lb />
Greensboro Telegram. <lb />
mm <lb />
.-.--.- <lb />
torn. <lb />
.-<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018138_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
WINTERVILLE DEPARTMENT <lb />
IN CHARGE OF PAUL N. <lb />
HALIFAX COUNTY DOES <lb />
SOME RECORD BREAKING <lb />
Authorized Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb />
Eastern Reflector for Winterville vicinity <lb />
Advertising Rates on Application <lb />
Winterville, X. C, March <lb />
Vance Literary Society, of Winter- <lb />
ville High School, will give a pub- <lb />
debate, Friday night, March 10th. <lb />
at in the W. H. auditorium. <lb />
That the United <lb />
States Government Should Own and <lb />
Control the Railroads of the United <lb />
The affirmative will be sup- <lb />
ported by Messrs. S. O. Roberson. C. <lb />
E. Langston, R. T. Causey and P. N <lb />
Negative. Messrs. L. T. <lb />
Whitley, W. H. Sharp, G. J. Johnson <lb />
and G. H. Cox. All are cordially in- <lb />
to be present. <lb />
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com <lb />
are well supplied to take car <lb />
of the dead as well as the living <lb />
Coffins of different qualities and <lb />
prices. <lb />
Mr. P. T. Anthony, of Greenville <lb />
was in town Friday evening. <lb />
The A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com <lb />
will pay you fair prices for <lb />
down cattle that need repairs. <lb />
they are repaired they will sell then <lb />
for beef. <lb />
A protracted meeting will begin o- <lb />
Monday night after the third <lb />
March 20th, at the M. E. church, i <lb />
Winterville, conducted by Rev. R. I <lb />
Caraway, and assisted by Rev. B. I <lb />
Harrington, Barber <lb />
carry a large stock of pump <lb />
See them. , . <lb />
Mr. G. G. who has been a. <lb />
tending the A. and M. College, o <lb />
Raleigh, returned home <lb />
day. i <lb />
The faculty of Winterville <lb />
School are having the <lb />
re-painted. <lb />
Mr. Blanchard went t <lb />
his home in Wilson to spend Sat <lb />
and Sunday. <lb />
The best and cheapest roofing i. <lb />
that rubber roofing sold by <lb />
ton, Barber Company. <lb />
Prof. H. F. Brinson left <lb />
evening to preach near Ahoskie Sui <lb />
day. <lb />
Winterville, N. March <lb />
member the Vance Literary <lb />
will give a public debate in Winter <lb />
ville High School auditorium <lb />
March 10th, at p. m. Query <lb />
That the V. S. government <lb />
should own and control the <lb />
of the United All are <lb />
invited. <lb />
A new lot of horse collars just <lb />
rived at A. w. A Company's. <lb />
Rev. M. A. Adams Oiled his <lb />
appointments in the Baptist <lb />
Sunday and Sunday night <lb />
you want an Oliver Chilled <lb />
or a Ledbetter seed planter, see A <lb />
W. Company. <lb />
Harrington, Barber ft Company <lb />
have received a nice line of ladies <lb />
and slippers tor spring and <lb />
Mr. It. H. who ha <lb />
keen taking a business course a <lb />
Mac Business College in Rich <lb />
returned home Saturday <lb />
Sheriff I. Dudley was in <lb />
Sunday evening. <lb />
Misses Edith and Beulah Mumford <lb />
were in town Sunday visiting friends. <lb />
See Harrington, Barber Company <lb />
your matting and floor oil cloth. <lb />
FINDS. <lb />
TRAINS. <lb />
The Soul Railway Operating Ag- <lb />
Train. <lb />
the department of agriculture <lb />
the college of agriculture of that <lb />
During the week beginning Mon- <lb />
lay, March C, the Southern Railway <lb />
in line with its policy of <lb />
everything possible for the bet- <lb />
of agricultural conditions in <lb />
lie territory traversed by its lines, <lb />
run two special agricultural <lb />
rains. One of these trains will be <lb />
in co-operation with the <lb />
department of agriculture and <lb />
emigration and will spend the en- <lb />
week on the Richmond division, <lb />
the lines between Rich- <lb />
and Danville and Richmond and <lb />
Vest Point. Meetings have been <lb />
at twelve points at which the <lb />
rain will step. The other will be run <lb />
the lines of tho Southern Rail- <lb />
and the Queen and Crescent <lb />
in Kentucky in co-operation <lb />
Twenty-four stops will be made <lb />
y this train. <lb />
Each of these trains will be in <lb />
large of parties made up of men of <lb />
knowledge and practical ex- <lb />
who will be able to give <lb />
of the greatest value. Sub- <lb />
lets be arranged to tho <lb />
lost pressing needs of the different <lb />
visited. Bad weather will not <lb />
e allowed to interfere with the meet- <lb />
as all will be held in the <lb />
coaches which the trains will <lb />
The Southern Railway in connect- <lb />
n with other lines Is furnishing ab- <lb />
free of charge a train with <lb />
the State College of <lb />
ire of Georgia Is making a forty <lb />
even day tour of the state. The great <lb />
entailed by the running these <lb />
is borne by the Southern in the <lb />
that its interests are identical <lb />
those of the farmers of the <lb />
and that it will eventually be <lb />
by the improvements in con- <lb />
that will result from an in- <lb />
adoption of better methods <lb />
if agriculture. <lb />
County Pensions to Old <lb />
Remarkable Blind Couple. <lb />
Scotland Neck, N. C, March <lb />
Mr. I have just <lb />
a month and a week, and I have <lb />
many friends and have found <lb />
the people generally very congenial <lb />
and nice to me. It is beginning to <lb />
seem like home and I am enjoying <lb />
myself here fine. I have been well <lb />
ever since coming here. They have <lb />
a nice little town of about 1,700 in- <lb />
habitants. <lb />
The Buck Camp of Con- <lb />
federate veterans meet once a <lb />
and they are served with a nice din- <lb />
every time they meet by the good <lb />
ladies of Scotland Neck. <lb />
Scotland Neck has two record- <lb />
breakers and Halifax county one. <lb />
are record-breakers so far as <lb />
my knowledge The county <lb />
pays all the old soldiers a pension <lb />
every month of three, some four and <lb />
some five dollars. I had that <lb />
Pitt was about as and friendly <lb />
toward the old soldiers as any county <lb />
in the State, but I find that Halifax <lb />
beats her in pensioning of her <lb />
Scotland Neck beats all records <lb />
that I have ever heard of in three <lb />
old soldiers, fader and two sons. Mr. <lb />
Duke the father, years <lb />
old. Mr. Bennett and Mr. Wilson <lb />
sons, and respect- <lb />
were all In the war together. <lb />
Another record-breaker is a blind <lb />
couple living together here. It is a <lb />
Mr. and his wife, both-blind, <lb />
and the most strange part it is <lb />
the wife does her own housework, <lb />
such as cooking, sewing, cleaning, <lb />
etc., and they have an adopted <lb />
daughter of about eight years. Mr. <lb />
walks up town to his place <lb />
of business where he makes mat- <lb />
tresses and does and <lb />
repairs chairs and puts up very good <lb />
jobs. By using a slick to feel his <lb />
way he can go to any place in town <lb />
that he wants to go to. <lb />
It is now p. m. and it is snow- <lb />
thick and fast, and its been rain- <lb />
some since o'clock, but the rain <lb />
has ceased. <lb />
T. E. L. <lb />
ITEMS <lb />
Personal Mention and Neighborhood <lb />
New. <lb />
N. C, March Miss <lb />
Maud Lassiter and little brother, Of <lb />
Hill, were visiting at Mr. <lb />
Smith's Friday night. <lb />
Mrs. Ellen of Ayden, <lb />
is spending some time here with <lb />
Messrs. R. E. Willoughby and J. <lb />
R. Smith went to Ayden Saturday. <lb />
Mrs. C. L. Tyson and children, of <lb />
visited relatives here Sat- <lb />
and Sunday. <lb />
Mr. Guy Lassiter, of Snow Hill, <lb />
visited Mr. Mark Smith Saturday and <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gay, of Farm- <lb />
were here Sunday. <lb />
Miss Agnes Smith, of E. C. T. T. <lb />
S., came home Saturday and return- <lb />
ed Monday. <lb />
Mr. John Flanagan and wife spent <lb />
Friday night at Mr. Ivey Smith's. <lb />
Emma Joyner, of Greenville, <lb />
spent Saturday night and Sunday here <lb />
with relatives. <lb />
Mr. W. F. Walters, of Ayden. filled <lb />
his regular appointment at Arthur <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Mrs. Lloyd Smith and Miss Gertie <lb />
spent Saturday and Sunday in Farm- <lb />
ville. <lb />
Little Melton happened <lb />
lo a bad accident Monday. He chop- <lb />
his thumb with a hatchet and <lb />
amputation was necessary. <lb />
WITH MRS. E. G. FLANAGAN. <lb />
Entertains In Honor of Mrs. T. M. <lb />
Hooker. <lb />
EVENING WITH GREAT SINGERS.<lb />
His Golden Wedding. <lb />
Uncle had put on a clean <lb />
and his best coat and was <lb />
majestically up and down <lb />
ho street. <lb />
you working today, <lb />
Bleed somebody. <lb />
Use <lb />
were married fifty years ago<lb />
why isn't your wife helping <lb />
to celebrate <lb />
t present wife, replied <lb />
Mr. Ola of Ayden, was in with dignity, <lb />
town Sunday. got to do with <lb />
Enjoyed by a Few Guests at <lb />
Training School. <lb />
Not all of us get the opportunity <lb />
in life to visit Paris, <lb />
or even New York and Boston, to <lb />
hear the noted s of the world, <lb />
but through the means of that won- <lb />
nineteenth century invention, <lb />
the that preserves <lb />
carries the human voice in all <lb />
richness and expression, Caruso, <lb />
Melba, Constantino, <lb />
and other <lb />
are brought to and <lb />
we can hear their songs almost as <lb />
perfectly as if sitting in an audience <lb />
before thorn. Through the kindness <lb />
of Prof. Austin and Miss a <lb />
few friends gathered Monday evening <lb />
in the Y. W. A. Hall at the Train- <lb />
school to hear a number of <lb />
by the noted singers i. re- <lb />
on a large Victor machine. It <lb />
was indeed a musical feast that all <lb />
present were grateful for the bin or- <lb />
unity of enjoying. For the time, <lb />
one could readily imagine he tat in <lb />
the presence of world's <lb />
artists. <lb />
On Tuesday evening at her home <lb />
on Evans street Mrs. E. G. Flanagan <lb />
gave a reception in honor of Mrs. <lb />
T. M. Hooker, the recent bride. <lb />
The hostess and guest of honor <lb />
met the guests at the door, <lb />
and after wraps were removed, <lb />
they were served with punch by Mrs. <lb />
T. M. Washington, of Wilson, and <lb />
Mrs. J. L. Wooten. <lb />
Mrs. R. C. Flanagan and Mrs. W. <lb />
L. Hall received at the sitting room <lb />
door, and Mrs. H. L. Coward and <lb />
Mrs. T. E. Hooker at the library <lb />
door. <lb />
The color scheme of the home was <lb />
a suggestion of spring, having a <lb />
profusion of and violets, <lb />
with ferns and potted plants. The <lb />
punch bowl was decorated with lace <lb />
terns, and and rested in a <lb />
bank of violets. <lb />
game of heart dice was enjoyed <lb />
tty ail present, the prize, a handsome <lb />
picture, being won by Miss <lb />
Smith. Ti-e guest of honor's prize <lb />
was a bunch of carnations, and the <lb />
booby also a picture, was awarded <lb />
to C. C. Skinner, of New York. <lb />
ornamented with <lb />
pictures were used, these being dis- <lb />
from a yellow basket by <lb />
Miss Viola <lb />
The refreshments, served by Misses <lb />
May Willis, of New Bern, Mary <lb />
Smith and Nannie Bowling, were in <lb />
g with the color scheme, the <lb />
ices in yellow, and each guest re- <lb />
a souvenir bunch of violets <lb />
aid ferns. <lb />
Some men go about seeking temp- <lb />
in order to test their will <lb />
A woman can be most mistaken <lb />
having married a man and yet <lb />
very glad she did it. <lb />
When a man ceases to <lb />
to do things. <lb />
doubt he <lb />
The Carolina and Farm and The Eastern <lb />
IDLE-STUDIES- <lb />
ELISHA SUCCESSOR TO ELIJAH <lb />
Restitution Work and Judgment Work <lb />
Foreshadowed Forty-two Youths <lb />
Torn by the Child Restored <lb />
to Life. <lb />
II Kings <lb />
gift of God It eternal through Jesus <lb />
Christ our <lb />
OUR lesson follows in order the <lb />
one of n week ago. Elisha was <lb />
with Elijah until the whirl- <lb />
wind separated them and took <lb />
Elijah out of sight. His mantle drop- <lb />
to Elisha and Elisha's prayer was <lb />
answered that a double portion of Eli- <lb />
Jab's spirit might rest upon him. <lb />
The same miracle occurred to him <lb />
as to Elijah tho prophet. On the <lb />
other side of Jordan be began his <lb />
career as a prophet- At Jericho the <lb />
supply of water came from a brackish <lb />
stream, unpalatable unhealthful. <lb />
Elisha went to the fountain and there <lb />
performed a miracle similar to the one <lb />
performed by Moses at the Wells of <lb />
Moses at To this day the <lb />
spring is known as Elisha's Fountain. <lb />
Again we read that one of these <lb />
of the or students, <lb />
died and that bis widowed mother was <lb />
in want and that <lb />
the Prophet Eli- <lb />
helped <lb />
to exercise faith. <lb />
She had a cruse <lb />
of oil, which in- <lb />
creased in supply <lb />
as she poured It <lb />
from vessel to <lb />
vessel until she <lb />
had sufficient for <lb />
ail her debts. <lb />
Several other <lb />
miracles of n re- <lb />
ration <lb />
character are the <lb />
noted, the most. prominent of which <lb />
is related in our lesson, namely, tho <lb />
restoration of a boy to life and health. <lb />
The thing connected with Elisha's ex- <lb />
which has attracted to him <lb />
world-wide attention and general rep- <lb />
was his cursing of forty-two <lb />
youths. <lb />
A Just Rebuke and Lesson <lb />
The thought is that he condemned <lb />
them, just Jesus said to some with <lb />
most kindly art, unto you, scribes <lb />
and etc. So Elisha pro- <lb />
woe or blight upon those <lb />
youths of various ages who taunted <lb />
him. He declared that something <lb />
would befall them. Divine Justice <lb />
would square accounts and vindicate <lb />
him. Forthwith two she bears came <lb />
upon the rabble, put them to flight, <lb />
and forty-two of the mob were torn <lb />
and or less. Opponents <lb />
of the Bible read into this tho forty- <lb />
two children were killed, but nothing <lb />
of the kind is stated. <lb />
We are to remember that the Israel- <lb />
under tho leadership of their King <lb />
and Queen Jezebel had been <lb />
turned to idolatry, and that although <lb />
the Prophet Elijah had re-established <lb />
the true religion, the King and Queen <lb />
and the majority of the people merely <lb />
tolerated it. These youths who had <lb />
against tho Prophet were prob- <lb />
ably the young men boys of Jeri- <lb />
Considered Typical. <lb />
Our Interest in this story of Elisha's <lb />
experiences after Elijah was taken <lb />
Increases as we consider the fact <lb />
that he, like Elijah, was quite a <lb />
and typical character. We have <lb />
already intimated a be- <lb />
tween Elijah the priests <lb />
and between Elisha and the <lb />
of the Gospel Age. Elisha may<lb />
Inauguration Messiah's <lb />
in all the From this <lb />
standpoint we might think of Elisha <lb />
representing the secondary class of the <lb />
spirit-begotten ones first, and that his <lb />
crossing of Jordan represents the death <lb />
of this class of <lb />
With this view the after progress of <lb />
Elisha bis work of judgment <lb />
restitution already referred to, <lb />
well with what we should ex- <lb />
at the Inauguration of Messiah's <lb />
Kingdom under the The <lb />
healing of the water-spring would well <lb />
represent the healing of the stream of <lb />
Truth. For long <lb />
centuries error <lb />
and superstition, <lb />
combined with <lb />
Satan's great <lb />
falsehood. Ye <lb />
shall not surely <lb />
die. have made <lb />
the waters of <lb />
Truth brackish, <lb />
unpalatable, <lb />
healthful. The <lb />
putting of the <lb />
salt Into the <lb />
Fountain or <lb />
Spring symbol- <lb />
represents <lb />
the cleansing from untruth and error, <lb />
through the co-operation f the Church <lb />
in glory, which, while is <lb />
styled, salt of the <lb />
The restoration of life to the dead is <lb />
to be one of the great features of <lb />
New King- <lb />
And this power will be exercised <lb />
doubtless through the of that <lb />
time, typified, we believe, by Elisha. <lb />
Those most to be favored will be those <lb />
who will most thoroughly appreciate <lb />
and best receive the <lb />
by Elisha, even the parents <lb />
of this child whom Elisha raised from <lb />
the dead had made gracious provision <lb />
for the prophet's comfort. <lb />
Raising dead. <lb />
TEACHING THE FARMERS. <lb />
LITTLE CHICK AND <lb />
at F. V. Johnston's. <lb />
HEX FEED <lb />
will save the dyspeptic from many <lb />
days of misery, and enable him to eat <lb />
whatever he wishes. They prevent <lb />
HEADACHE, <lb />
cause the food to assimilate and <lb />
the body, give keen appetite, <lb />
DEVELOP FLESH <lb />
Elegantly sugar <lb />
and solid muscle, <lb />
coated. <lb />
Take No Substitute. <lb />
Stray Taken Up. <lb />
I have taken up one stray yearling, <lb />
red color, about one year old, <lb />
marked. Owner can get same by <lb />
proving ownership and paying <lb />
charges. <lb />
C. E. FLEMING, <lb />
R. F. D. Greenville, N. C. <lb />
February 20th, 1911. <lb />
A Safe Harbor. <lb />
The home that possesses a cheer- <lb />
wife and mother is not only a <lb />
veritable haven of rest, but the safe <lb />
harbor whose beacon light will <lb />
her breadwinners safely past <lb />
rocks and shoals with unfailing <lb />
The woman whose cheerful <lb />
can take that attitude <lb />
toward that enables her to <lb />
courageously the inevitable burdens <lb />
pf her life's environment, that <lb />
strengthens her determination not to <lb />
fret or worry those who for her sake <lb />
are fighting the hard battles in the <lb />
has reached that attitude that <lb />
proclaims her price above rubies, and <lb />
influence and examples are not <lb />
ell only within the limits of the four <lb />
walks she has made the unassailable <lb />
also typify the Into bulwark of state and society, a happy <lb />
whose hands the instruction and bless home, but reach to those she <lb />
its the world will be the of Durham Sun. <lb />
The Country Mast Depend <lb />
. Them. <lb />
Looking from the dusty streets, and <lb />
smoke and din and slavery of city <lb />
life, the Kansas City Journal turns <lb />
its eyes to the pleasing verdure of <lb />
rural life, and <lb />
Never before in this country <lb />
there been such instruction in all <lb />
phases of husbandry as City <lb />
people seem to have become possess- <lb />
ed all at once with the desire to get <lb />
back to the farm. In newspapers, <lb />
magazines, books and popular <lb />
the experts are all busy telling <lb />
the people how they may escape <lb />
from the thralldom of urban employ- <lb />
The patient clerk who never <lb />
dreamed before of the possibilities <lb />
of agriculture is now spending bis <lb />
evenings poring over literature that <lb />
gladdens his Imagination. The man <lb />
who works for another is casting <lb />
longing eyes upon the hoping <lb />
for the day when he can be <lb />
The Journal further points out <lb />
that all this is edifying and. perhaps, <lb />
beneficial to those chiefly concerned, <lb />
but the real good that ii being done <lb />
now in the way of advancing the <lb />
science of fanning is accomplished <lb />
by educating the farmers themselves. <lb />
There have been vast changes and <lb />
improvements in farming methods <lb />
within the last few years. The old- <lb />
fashioned farmer who plowed, sowed, <lb />
hoed and harvested In the way his <lb />
father and grandfather did before <lb />
him is now learning better ways. He <lb />
is finding out that vast saving of <lb />
time, money and energy may be made <lb />
by using his wits in the adoption of <lb />
modern methods. <lb />
The farmers are fast learning the <lb />
lesson of soil conservation, <lb />
cation and scientific rotation of crops <lb />
and better ways of marketing. And <lb />
this knowledge is going where it will <lb />
do the most practical farm <lb />
It does not stop when the ink <lb />
dries on the pages Of the agricultural <lb />
journals. Experiments have resulted <lb />
in plans put into practice; and the <lb />
results of experiments that sounded <lb />
a few years ago like fairy tales are <lb />
no longer regarded in a skeptical <lb />
light and sarcastically and sneering- <lb />
called that <lb />
will not do when put to practical <lb />
tests. <lb />
The country must continue to de- <lb />
pend on its the hope- <lb />
and ambitious amateurs who <lb />
have had no experience, but the men <lb />
who have spent and are spending <lb />
their lives in agriculture and who <lb />
nave the land, the money and the in- <lb />
to put newer and better <lb />
methods into practice. When the <lb />
Farmers themselves arc more fully <lb />
to the possibilities of ad- <lb />
better ways of tilling the soil <lb />
ind growing livestock, then we may <lb />
highly important and valuable <lb />
results. <lb />
We sometimes hear the old <lb />
days before tho v. refer- <lb />
red to with a sigh, as if something <lb />
while has gone that will never <lb />
return; but the fanning industry <lb />
farming as a the south <lb />
s yet In infancy. A wonderful <lb />
Is now In progress. <lb />
Greensboro News. <lb />
INTERESTING CLOSING OF <lb />
SCHOOL <lb />
HAPPENINGS ABOUND COX'S MILL <lb />
WOOD'S LAWN <lb />
seed at F. V. Johnston's. ltd <lb />
The artificial blond's method of <lb />
keeping her hair light is a dark <lb />
BROWS LEGHORN EGGS FOB SET- <lb />
ting. F- V. Johnston. <lb />
Good f Farmers <lb />
Measles Takes <lb />
Cox's Mill. N. C, March <lb />
closing exercises of Miss Rosa White- <lb />
school was held at the <lb />
Gowan school house Friday night. <lb />
A very large crowd was present and <lb />
the exercises of the students was all <lb />
that could be asked, not a single <lb />
mistake being made in the whole <lb />
program. Each one reflected credit <lb />
upon themselves and their most <lb />
teacher. It was clearly seen that <lb />
each one had the best of training in <lb />
the many speeches, and <lb />
drills. We had music, both vocal <lb />
and instrumental, that was fine. <lb />
Miss Rosa is a line teacher and <lb />
has made many friends while among <lb />
us. We hope to have her teach our <lb />
next school, if she docs not take up <lb />
some other vocation of life. <lb />
Mr. J. Cox, Jr., has a quick <lb />
step and is all smiles. It is a girl. <lb />
Mrs. Whitehurst, mother of our <lb />
teacher, and Miss Mary Whitehurst, <lb />
her cousin, of Bethel, came down to <lb />
be at the school entertainment and <lb />
stopped with Mrs. W. F. Carroll. <lb />
Our local Farmers held their <lb />
regular monthly meeting at the <lb />
Gowan school house Saturday night. <lb />
Mr. J. Marshall Cox and Mr. S. A. <lb />
Stocks, both made very able and in- <lb />
talks on fanning and the <lb />
good of the union. After the speak- <lb />
and other business was disposed <lb />
of, we had a real line barbecue sup- <lb />
per and all ate to their hearts con- <lb />
tent. When all could cat no more <lb />
there was plenty left. <lb />
Measles has been the order of the <lb />
day around here. They took both old <lb />
and young that had not been <lb />
before. One colored family <lb />
on Mr. Frank Carroll's farm, the old <lb />
man and nine children, were sick <lb />
at one time last week. <lb />
Farmers are getting along lino <lb />
with their work. <lb />
Realist Gun Practice. <lb />
Heretofore great gun target <lb />
in the navy has been educational- <lb />
very useful in training tho gun <lb />
crews and gun pointers, but it has <lb />
ways been recognized that firing at <lb />
canvas targets, whether stationary or <lb />
movable, at few thousand yards, <lb />
however useful in teaching men to <lb />
shoot straight, was somewhat <lb />
from the actual gun practice that <lb />
would be necessary in real warfare. <lb />
The canvas targets do not afford any <lb />
indication of the action of shot and <lb />
shell on the armed side of a ship any- <lb />
where from to yards dis- <lb />
Recently the navy department has <lb />
determined to follow the example long <lb />
since set by the British navy and <lb />
more recently by the French navy, In <lb />
utilizing old and obsolete Ironclads <lb />
as targets to be fired on at true bat- <lb />
ranges. Such targets being <lb />
armored show the <lb />
ship of the gun crews at real fight- <lb />
distances and at the same <lb />
afford valuable information as to tho <lb />
power of projectiles, as well as tho <lb />
resisting strength of armor plate. By <lb />
using manikins and pressure <lb />
n various parts of these real targets <lb />
effect of gun lire upon tho ship's <lb />
and upon her crew can <lb />
In a measure Or- <lb />
leans Picayune.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018138_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
. I <lb />
HOW A WORKING MAN <lb />
IS HELPFUL TO OTHERS <lb />
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
MR. W. A. HARDEN WHITES AGAIN <lb />
His Former Letter to Inspire <lb />
College Students. <lb />
N. C. March 1911. <lb />
Now, Mr. Editor, since you <lb />
brought me into the by <lb />
publishing that letter that I only <lb />
meant for you and the waste basket, <lb />
I will keep the light, for this let- <lb />
at least. sent a copy of your <lb />
paper with that letter in it to <lb />
dent J. B. Dudley, A. and M. College, <lb />
for the colored race, Greensboro, N. <lb />
d no suggestion, but he seem- <lb />
ed t; b the point and wrote me the <lb />
enclosed letter Id reference to it. If <lb />
there is any one thing the trustees <lb />
of the above institution are trying <lb />
to have impressed upon the boys who <lb />
attend this school, it is that the <lb />
is peculiarly for farm work <lb />
and should take farming up as an <lb />
Wherefore, if one of the <lb />
trustees Of this school is willing to <lb />
work and does not hesitate to go out <lb />
in the sunshine and rain, then when <lb />
they are told that work is honorable <lb />
and idleness is dishonorable, they <lb />
have an example as to the honorable- <lb />
in your humble servant. <lb />
This reminds me of the work I was <lb />
doing when I received notice of my <lb />
appointment as one of the trustees, <lb />
I was Chopping a very grassy row <lb />
of cotton and was about as green as <lb />
to what to do as the grass I was chop- <lb />
ping. I had just about hours to <lb />
make inquiry of my lamented friend, <lb />
Dr. E, H. whether to go or <lb />
not, and to get to Kinston in time <lb />
for the train that evening. I decided <lb />
to attend the meeting which was <lb />
called for the next day, so I set out <lb />
for the depot as soon as I could get <lb />
ready and got as far as Goldsboro <lb />
that night. There I fell in with <lb />
Judge Connor who gave me a letter <lb />
of introduction to Mr. A. M. <lb />
Sealer, if Greensboro, who was chair- <lb />
man of the board of trustees at that <lb />
time. found two on the <lb />
board at that time and somehow, the <lb />
two and myself were made <lb />
the finance committee. They were <lb />
Russell appointees and when their <lb />
time expired they were replaced by <lb />
Democrats, and are now, as they were <lb />
then, holding a position in the census <lb />
department at Washington. <lb />
Another gentlemen I must name <lb />
before closing was on that board of <lb />
trustees; my friend, and one time <lb />
classmate. State Superintendent J. Y. <lb />
Joyner. You notice <lb />
Joyner that he was at one <lb />
time a class mate of mine. That was <lb />
at LaGrange in the fall of 1876 or <lb />
of 1877. I came home and for <lb />
or years stood behind the counter <lb />
Of my wife's father's country store <lb />
Mr. Joyner went on to the <lb />
and graduated with honors. I <lb />
could not go with him, but there was <lb />
a hankering within me to go to the <lb />
Bryant Business College, <lb />
of Baltimore, having gotten hold of <lb />
of their literature. So I threw <lb />
up my store job and attended that <lb />
school and have my diploma. Don't <lb />
you tell Jim Joyner, but I don't ask <lb />
him any odd, if do hop clods. <lb />
Last year when the city and <lb />
people were crying out about the <lb />
cost of I was eating <lb />
my own products and feeding my <lb />
upon home products, and there- <lb />
to; e was by the high <lb />
See <lb />
W. A, DARDEN. <lb />
A NEW USE FOR CONVICTS. <lb />
Robeson County Let <lb />
Them Out to Grab Stumps. <lb />
In the year of grace 1910, in the <lb />
eleventh month of the year, the <lb />
of the county of Robeson elect- <lb />
ed five men, known as commissioners, <lb />
to administer the affairs of the county <lb />
justly and righteously. <lb />
In this county certain transgress- <lb />
ors are sentenced for period of vary <lb />
length to the chain gang, to work <lb />
upon the roads; and it is the duty of <lb />
to employ this <lb />
gang, under a keeper of their <lb />
to work the roads of the county <lb />
and keep them in repair, so that the <lb />
people may travel up and down upon <lb />
these roads, and go to and fro in the <lb />
land. <lb />
Now It came to pass in the year of <lb />
grace 1911, in the second month of the <lb />
year, the same being February, while <lb />
it was yet early in the month, though <lb />
roads in various portions of the <lb />
were in exceeding bad condition, <lb />
the work of the chain gang <lb />
it came to pass that there were no re- <lb />
quests from any particular portion <lb />
of the county for the gang, so the <lb />
commissioners said to the keeper, Mr. <lb />
W. D. Go to, now, we know <lb />
that thou art a careful man and a <lb />
prudent; take therefore the gang call- <lb />
ed chain to thy farm hard by the <lb />
town called Lumberton, on the road <lb />
called Carthage, and do with them <lb />
as thou wilt for the space of days; <lb />
and for this thou shalt feed the men <lb />
at thine own expense and shalt also <lb />
work the road that runs through thy <lb />
farm; and return again to us at the <lb />
end of days. <lb />
Now the keeper had upon his land <lb />
many stumps, in an abundance called <lb />
galore, so much so that to the passer <lb />
by they seemed to freckle the land- <lb />
scape. <lb />
So the keeper did even according <lb />
to the word of the commissioners, <lb />
and after working the specified <lb />
ch of road, which is but little more <lb />
than a stone's throw in length, the <lb />
keeper caused the men whose labor <lb />
had been so generously given him by <lb />
the commissioners to toil diligently <lb />
with the stumps, and lo, before the <lb />
days were numbered, to the passer- <lb />
by the stump-freckled fields <lb />
appeared as clean as the palm of a <lb />
man's hand <lb />
man's hand, and much store of stumps <lb />
was piled at the keeper's house. <lb />
And the people and <lb />
Was it ever on this wise before Did <lb />
we not appoint these men as they <lb />
would their own What man is there <lb />
among them who having a force of <lb />
hands and many fields needing work <lb />
would lend those hands to his neigh- <lb />
for a month for their keep, be- <lb />
cause no one of his overseers asked <lb />
to be allowed to work the hands <lb />
And some said it was a shame and <lb />
an outrage, and other some smiled, <lb />
and said it was a good joke on the <lb />
commissioners, and other some said <lb />
the joke was on the people. <lb />
Meanwhile, nothing was done to- <lb />
ward improving the roads of the <lb />
county. <lb />
But the convicts did good job on <lb />
the keeper's stumps, to the keeper's <lb />
great Robe- <lb />
Plagiarisms of History. <lb />
Henry Clay had just made his fa-<lb />
I would rather be right than <lb />
be president <lb />
Imagine his when he found <lb />
out that he had stolen the idea from <lb />
Mr. Tribune. <lb />
NEWSPAPER PRESS FOR SALE. <lb />
Having placed an order for a new fast news- <lb />
paper and book press, to be installed the middle of <lb />
April, we have a newspaper press that will be <lb />
sold at a bargain for delivery May 1st. <lb />
It is a Press, large enough <lb />
to print four pages, or two <lb />
pages and has steam fixtures so that it can be run <lb />
either by hand or power. Been in use six years. <lb />
It is a splendid press for a weekly paper and <lb />
is in good condition to do many years good <lb />
vice. We used a press from the same factory for <lb />
years before installing this one, printing a daily <lb />
paper with small circulation about years of that <lb />
time. Its speed, an hour, is too slow for a daily <lb />
paper with the present circulation of The <lb />
tor, and for that reason we are having to displace <lb />
it with a faster press. <lb />
Any one interested and wanting a good press <lb />
for a weekly newspaper, can see this press at work <lb />
every day in the Reflector building, before our new <lb />
press is installed. Any one who cannot come to <lb />
see it at work and examine it, can get particulars <lb />
by addressing <lb />
The Reflector Company, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
SEE THE FREE SEWING MACHINE <lb />
at our store. Absolutely ball bearing <lb />
throughout and runs without effort <lb />
The Free is the Only Insured Sewing Machine <lb />
Taft VanDyke Furniture Store<lb />
CHESAPEAKE LINE TO BALTIMORE <lb />
Connecting with rail lines for all points <lb />
NORTH and WEST <lb />
JUST THE SEASON TO ENJOY A SHORT <lb />
WATER TRIP. <lb />
ELEGANT STEAMERS <lb />
if Carte and Table <lb />
Steamers leave Norfolk p. in. from foot of Jackson street <lb />
and arrive Baltimore 7.00 a. in. <lb />
For full particulars and reservation, write <lb />
F. R. T. P. A. <lb />
Street, <lb />
Norfolk, Virginia <lb />
Home of Women's Greenville N C. <lb />
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
PASSING AWAY OF ONE OF <lb />
GREENVILLE'S OLDEST CITIZENS <lb />
COMING TO SOON. <lb />
COLONEL WILLIAM MAY KING. <lb />
Posing of A Long and <lb />
Life. <lb />
Honorable <lb />
In the death of Mr. William M. <lb />
King, which occurred at o'clock <lb />
this morning at his home on Fifth <lb />
street, there passed away one of <lb />
Greenville's oldest, best and most <lb />
esteemed citizens. He was years <lb />
of age, had been in feeble health <lb />
since November and confined to his <lb />
bed about three weeks. <lb />
William May King was born No- <lb />
18th, 1833, in Falkland town- <lb />
ship, Pitt county, and spent his early <lb />
life on the farm. He was a <lb />
of the Home Guards in <lb />
and became a colonel of the militia. <lb />
His first official position was as <lb />
justice of the peace under appoint- <lb />
of Governor In 1870 <lb />
he became a county commissioner, <lb />
serving them for two years, and was <lb />
one of Pitt county's members of the <lb />
State constitutional convention in <lb />
He was elected sheriff in 1882 <lb />
and served six years, being chosen <lb />
to that office three times in <lb />
In 1894 he was elected <lb />
of deeds and served two years, <lb />
and was again com- <lb />
missioner in 1896, serving for two <lb />
years. <lb />
Mr. King moved from his farm to <lb />
Greenville early in the year 1885 and <lb />
spent the remainder of his life here, <lb />
but never losing interest in his farm. <lb />
He was an exemplary citizen, strong <lb />
in his character and personal con- <lb />
yet always respecting the <lb />
opinions of others, and was noted for <lb />
his abundant charity and deeds of <lb />
kindness. For years he was a <lb />
Mason, being for many years <lb />
Master of the lodge at Falk- <lb />
land and also at Greenville after <lb />
his membership here. He was <lb />
also a Royal Arch Mason, being a <lb />
charter member of the first chap- <lb />
ever established in Greenville. <lb />
In November, 1856, he married Miss <lb />
Dicey Almeta Peebles, the aged wife <lb />
surviving him. They celebrated their <lb />
golden wedding in 1906. There are <lb />
four surviving children, Mrs. Pattie <lb />
Winstead, of Rocky Mount; Mrs. S. <lb />
C. Wells, of Wilson; Mrs. G. B. King, <lb />
of Washington City, and Mrs. L. I. <lb />
Moore, of New Bern. These were all <lb />
with him in his last hours. He also <lb />
leaves two sisters, Mrs. A. V. New- <lb />
ton, of Fountain and Mrs. Ben Moore, <lb />
of Farmville. <lb />
At o'clock Sunday morning <lb />
the body will be taken from his late <lb />
residence, under Masonic escort, to <lb />
the church <lb />
on Dickinson avenue, <lb />
where services will be conducted by <lb />
Rev. W. O. From the church <lb />
the body will be taken to the old <lb />
home place near Falkland, where <lb />
the burial will take place at <lb />
o'clock, p. m., with Masonic honors. <lb />
Concert Tour Oxford <lb />
Singing Class. <lb />
The singing class of 1911 from the <lb />
Oxford Orphanage will start on the <lb />
first or Eastern concert tour on <lb />
Thursday, March The first tour <lb />
will close in or weeks, and after <lb />
a brief rest a second tour will be- <lb />
gin. <lb />
These annual concerts have reached <lb />
a really high standard of excellence. <lb />
The children and those who <lb />
them represent a cause very <lb />
near to the hearts of our people. Ev- <lb />
en if the tour and entertainments <lb />
were not in the interest of a great <lb />
work, the character of the concerts <lb />
would merit large and liberal pat- <lb />
An admission fee, as a rule, <lb />
charged and for this the children <lb />
give full value and more. <lb />
The funds brought to this <lb />
through these tours help much <lb />
in its maintenance. Today it is pro- <lb />
for children and, since it <lb />
was established in 1872, by the grand <lb />
lodge of Masons of North Carolina, <lb />
more than girls and boys have <lb />
directly under its blessed min- <lb />
Never have the benefits of this <lb />
noble institution been restricted to <lb />
the children of Masons. The primary <lb />
conditions of admissions have always <lb />
been the destitution, the need of the <lb />
children. <lb />
While the management of the Ox- <lb />
ford Orphanage strive to exercise the <lb />
strictest economy consistent with <lb />
effectiveness in the work, we have in- <lb />
formation that an Increase of its an- <lb />
income is now essential for its <lb />
maintenance even up to its present <lb />
standard of efficiency. Surely our <lb />
whole people will see to it that this <lb />
work is not restricted because of lack <lb />
of financial support. <lb />
The class begins its first tour bet- <lb />
equipped than usual and with <lb />
bright prospects for a most success- <lb />
tour. <lb />
Our people will delight to patron- <lb />
the concerts soon to be given. It <lb />
is our privilege to continue to as- <lb />
in this and in any other way a <lb />
cause so worthy. <lb />
Schedule <lb />
ROUTE OF THE <lb />
NIGHT EXPRESS <lb />
Schedule effect December <lb />
N. following schedule fig- <lb />
published as information ONLY <lb />
and are not guaranteed. <lb />
LEAVE GREENVILLE <lb />
1.09 a. m., daily, Night Express Pull- <lb />
man Sleeping Car for Norfolk. <lb />
9.40 a. m., daily, for Norfolk and New <lb />
Parlor car service between <lb />
New Bern and Norfolk, connects for <lb />
all points north and west. <lb />
Ml p. m., daily except Sunday, for <lb />
Washington. <lb />
8.25 a. m., daily for Wilson and <lb />
connects north, south and <lb />
west. <lb />
7.51 a. m., daily except Sunday for <lb />
Wilson and Raleigh, connects for <lb />
all points. <lb />
p. in., daily, for Wilson and <lb />
For further information and <lb />
of sleeping car space, apply to <lb />
J. L. HASSELL, Agent, Greenville. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Professional Cards <lb />
W. F. EVANS <lb />
IT LAW <lb />
Office It. L Smith <lb />
and next door to John <lb />
Buggy new building. <lb />
. . N. Carolina <lb />
N. W. OUTLAW <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
office formerly occupied by. J. L <lb />
Fleming. <lb />
Greenville, . I. Carolina <lb />
The Best Discovery. <lb />
talk about the great discovery <lb />
of the telephone, wireless <lb />
and the rest, but another <lb />
discovery that from lo <lb />
bushels of corn can be grown on <lb />
an acre of land. A thing like this <lb />
or years ago would have been <lb />
hooted at, but it is as much of a fact <lb />
as these other <lb />
Record. <lb />
And occasionally a woman's <lb />
is only skin deep. <lb />
Do the little things well <lb />
And who can tell <lb />
But what they'll swell <lb />
To such a size <lb />
That you will rise <lb />
To greater power. <lb />
Every hour <lb />
Brings it chance. <lb />
If you'd advance <lb />
Just strive, <lb />
And in the end you will arrive. <lb />
It all depends on how you start; <lb />
You may be smart <lb />
And smooth and slick <lb />
And pick up to every scheme and <lb />
trick; <lb />
But steady work will do far more <lb />
To bring you quickly to the fore. <lb />
Herbert Kaufman <lb />
Millions of Friends. <lb />
How would you like to number <lb />
friends by millions as <lb />
Salve does Its astounding <lb />
cures in the past forty years made <lb />
them. Its the best Salve in the world <lb />
for sores, ulcers, burns, boils, <lb />
scalds, cuts, corns, eyes, sprains, <lb />
swellings, bruises, old cores. Has <lb />
equal for piles. at all drug- <lb />
gists. <lb />
Special Low Rates to <lb />
ATLANTA, GA., Via SEABOARD <lb />
LINE RAILWAY <lb />
AIR <lb />
S. <lb />
L. <lb />
Account <lb />
Southern Commercial Congress, <lb />
8th, 10th, 1911. <lb />
Account of the Southern Com- <lb />
Congress which meets in <lb />
Atlanta, March 1911, the <lb />
Seaboard Air Line Railway has <lb />
low round-trip rates from <lb />
all points on its lines to ATLANTA, <lb />
GEORGIA. <lb />
Tickets Will be on Sale March <lb />
6th mid <lb />
and for trains scheduled to arrive <lb />
in Atlanta morning of March 8th. <lb />
Tickets Limited to urn March <lb />
The Seaboard Air Line has an ex- <lb />
double daily service to At- <lb />
trains consisting of high-class <lb />
Pullman Sleeping Cars, Dining Car <lb />
service, also <lb />
coaches. <lb />
For rates, reservations, etc., call <lb />
on your local agent, or address, <lb />
H. S. <lb />
Division Passenger Agent, <lb />
RALEIGH, N. C. <lb />
c. <lb />
Many a nun is able to buy an <lb />
became he doesn't <lb />
The better the deed the fewer <lb />
do it. <lb />
Why not take a trip to FLORIDA <lb />
or CUBA They have been brought <lb />
within easy reach the splendid <lb />
through train service of the <lb />
ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD <lb />
Write for booklets, rates or any <lb />
other Information, which will <lb />
cheerfully furnished. <lb />
T. C. WHITE, <lb />
General Passenger Agent, <lb />
WILMINGTON, N. C. <lb />
be <lb />
W. C. D. M. <lb />
CLARK <lb />
Civil Engineers and Surveyors <lb />
Greenville, . . . <lb />
S. J. EVERETT <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
In Building. <lb />
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb />
U I. Moore. W. H. Long. <lb />
MOORE LONG <lb />
ATTORNEYS AT LAW <lb />
. . N. Carolina <lb />
CHARLES C. PIERCE <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
in all the courts. Office up <lb />
Phoenix next to <lb />
Dr. D. L. James <lb />
Green . . V Carolina <lb />
DR. R. L. CARR <lb />
DENTIST <lb />
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb />
SKINNER <lb />
Lawyer. <lb />
F. Car. <lb />
JULIUS BROWN <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
Greenville, . . N. Carolina <lb />
H. W. CARTER, M. D. <lb />
Practice limited to diseases of the <lb />
Bye, Ear, Nose and Throat. <lb />
Washington, N. C. Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Greenville office with Dr. D. L. <lb />
James. a. m. to p. m., <lb />
every Monday. <lb />
ALBION DUNN <lb />
ATTORNEY AT LAW <lb />
Office in on Third <lb />
street <lb />
Practices wherever his services are, <lb />
desired. <lb />
N. Carolina <lb />
-w <lb />
J C. LANIER <lb />
DEALER IN <lb />
Monuments <lb />
Tomb Stones <lb />
Iron Fencing <lb />
Can you look into a mud puddle <lb />
by the wayside and see anything hi <lb />
the puddle but mud <lb />
S. J. Nobles <lb />
MODERN BARBER SHOP <lb />
furnished, everything clean <lb />
attractive, working the very <lb />
best barbers. Second to none. <lb />
Opp. J. R. J. G.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018138_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
. .- <lb />
THE CAROLINA HOME and <lb />
FARM and EASTERN <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
Published by <lb />
COMPANY, Inc. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor. <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA <lb />
Carolina Home and Farm and The Extern<lb />
That is if you can't boost, bounce out <lb />
of the way of the fellow who wants <lb />
to boost. <lb />
Subscription, One year, . . <lb />
Six <lb />
rates may be had upon <lb />
at the business office in <lb />
All cards of thanks arid resolutions <lb />
be for a; <lb />
. k <lb />
date will ha charged for at three <lb />
per line, up to fifty lies <lb />
If the legislature could remain in <lb />
session until next Christmas, the <lb />
flood of local bills would likely con- <lb />
every day. <lb />
Some of these days people who are <lb />
opposed to good roads are going to <lb />
wonder how they ever thought that <lb />
way. <lb />
There will be no more and <lb />
saw dust bills to write about for two <lb />
years, until the legislature meets <lb />
again. <lb />
appointed by President Taft as as- <lb />
attorney general of tie de- <lb />
of justice. Perhaps that <lb />
will make Colonel Roosevelt smile. <lb />
Some men who are in business act <lb />
very much like they do not want any. <lb />
At least they never co-operate with <lb />
any movement that will bring more <lb />
business to the town. <lb />
had to crowd its picture gallery the <lb />
last few days, to get in all the <lb />
before the legislature adjourned. <lb />
Like the law makers themselves, it <lb />
left off much to de done in the final <lb />
rush. <lb />
The Carolina Home and Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
o- <lb />
Let the name of the harem skirt <lb />
be changed to scare <lb />
will do that anyhow Greensboro <lb />
News. <lb />
Oh, no it wont. It will draw his folks better. <lb />
They even have cock fighting up in <lb />
Mecklenburg, and on Sunday at that. <lb />
Last Sunday officers got wind that a <lb />
pit was going on a few miles in the <lb />
country, and they went out to pull <lb />
it. About fifty spectators were on <lb />
hand and the officers bagged nine- <lb />
teen of them. Patton should be teach- <lb />
Entered as second class matter <lb />
August at the post office at <lb />
Greenville. North Carolina, under <lb />
net March 1879. <lb />
FRIDAY. MARCH 1911. <lb />
U you are hunting for the best <lb />
town, come to Greenville. <lb />
Won-y lees and work more, and <lb />
you will get along better. <lb />
Senator Bailey did not stay resign- <lb />
ed. He took it back. <lb />
The Wilmington Dispatch wants the <lb />
to have rough-on-rats. <lb />
No doubt Senator feels <lb />
happy over it. but he was given a <lb />
close call. <lb />
In Saturday's escapade Senator <lb />
Bailey might have been classed as<lb />
The extra session of congress called <lb />
for the fourth of April, will put the <lb />
newly elected members on their jobs <lb />
a few months earlier. <lb />
The Raleigh News and Observer <lb />
might get its office cat ready to dis- <lb />
patch that that is if <lb />
the juice fails. <lb />
The legislature has had bills <lb />
protect fish, oysters, <lb />
fur bearing animals, birds, and <lb />
almost everything else but sheep. <lb />
Have you thought about anything <lb />
good for Greenville today Or do <lb />
you still hold to the disposition to <lb />
grouch and kick about something <lb />
Another North Carolina newspaper <lb />
that is getting old, and better as it <lb />
grows, is the Smithfield Herald, that <lb />
recently closed its thirtieth year. <lb />
The legislators are facing home- <lb />
ward, where they can give account of <lb />
what they have done during the <lb />
The most explanation will have <lb />
to be made of what they did not do. <lb />
Even if the legislature did sit down <lb />
on them, the High Pointers have not <lb />
given up their fight for Piedmont <lb />
county. They propose to keep the <lb />
question alive and try again. <lb />
A Texas judge has refused to serve <lb />
on a reception committee to greet <lb />
former President Roosevelt on his <lb />
visit to -the <lb />
son for such refusal being <lb />
misrepresentations in his <lb />
of Jefferson Davis and ignoring <lb />
efforts of the latter to get them <lb />
A man's deeds will <lb />
him. <lb />
The legislature has not finished its <lb />
work, because of so much time being <lb />
taken up on local matters, but when <lb />
the pay stops the work lively <lb />
do the same thing. <lb />
The congressional are <lb />
getting back home to take up their <lb />
former work. <lb />
It is almost the twelfth hour with <lb />
the legislature and much important <lb />
not done. <lb />
o- <lb />
Maybe the prospect of war on the <lb />
Mexican border will make Hobson <lb />
told you <lb />
Baltimore wants the next Demo- <lb />
national convention. No ob- <lb />
down this way. <lb />
The pay has stopped, and if the <lb />
legislature not stopped by the <lb />
time this is read, it will do so. <lb />
t-a Ions as the pope has placed <lb />
the ban oil harem skirts, it is not <lb />
expected to become very popular. <lb />
The legislature did dually come to <lb />
the point of locking up the club <lb />
against the sale of liquor. <lb />
March seems to be trying to do Its <lb />
worse in the way of weather. It <lb />
may be giving the ground hog some <lb />
satisfaction, but that's all. <lb />
There is nothing like feeling an in- <lb />
in and talking for your home <lb />
section, if you fail to do this, you <lb />
are not the right kind of citizen. <lb />
They will arrest a for beat- <lb />
a train when he don't even hurt it, <lb />
then not arrest him for beating <lb />
wife whom he does hurt. <lb />
If the legislature passes the bill <lb />
requiring the inspection of all liquor <lb />
shipped into the State, there will be <lb />
lots of fellows wanting the job of <lb />
inspector. <lb />
New Orleans believes in <lb />
but we doubt if the city spend- <lb />
to banquet ex-President <lb />
Roosevelt Will bring back the worth <lb />
of the money. <lb />
Abe the California briber, <lb />
Those bandits who held and robbed <lb />
the Southern train in Georgia last <lb />
month, have been convicted. The <lb />
leader of the gang got a sentence of <lb />
twenty years and two others fifteen <lb />
years each. <lb />
The Texas legislature wanted to <lb />
adjourn, when full pay stopped, with- <lb />
out having completed its work, and <lb />
Governor gave them a little <lb />
rap in quoting the parable of the <lb />
slothful servant. <lb />
Men who have money and do <lb />
with it, except watch for chances <lb />
to lend it out at usurious rates, are <lb />
not worth as much to a town as day <lb />
laborers who turn loose their earn- <lb />
into the channels of trade. <lb />
There is a coal dealer in Wash- <lb />
j------ <lb />
begun Ms fourteen years sen- <lb />
in the penitentiary. There are <lb />
others yet at large who ought to be <lb />
keeping company. <lb />
named prob- <lb />
ably fits the <lb />
News. <lb />
About the same way with the ice <lb />
dealer whose name is Short. <lb />
The defeat of Senator Tor- <lb />
land-title bill by the State sen- <lb />
ate is contrary to the wishes of a <lb />
large majority of the people of the <lb />
State. Some day the voice of the <lb />
people will be heard, <lb />
When the Cotten Torrens land-title <lb />
bill called for no appropriation and <lb />
was not on any body, <lb />
but only gave to those who wanted <lb />
to register their lands under its pro- <lb />
visions and have the title <lb />
teed by the State an opportunity to <lb />
do so, we are unable to see why the <lb />
legislature should have had any ob- <lb />
to passing it. <lb />
The appropriations made by the <lb />
legislature for the support of <lb />
institutions is very <lb />
pointing in some instances. Take <lb />
East Carolina Training <lb />
School for Instance, an institution to <lb />
which Greenville and Pitt county do- <lb />
while the State has <lb />
never-put but in its equip- <lb />
The present appropriation of <lb />
annually for this school, out <lb />
of which a deficit already existing <lb />
must be paid, looks niggardly and <lb />
ungrateful. <lb />
Be either i booster of a bouncer. A lawyer of Boston has been <lb />
The Baptist minister at Spencer and <lb />
the Presbyterian State evangelist <lb />
might put their time and talents to a <lb />
much better use than a war of words <lb />
over the question of It <lb />
would be a useless squabble. <lb />
Tho Raleigh News and Observer <lb />
In this connection The Reflector <lb />
wants to say that there is <lb />
here in Pitt county an article <lb />
that is better known and advertises <lb />
North Carolina more, especially <lb />
throughout the cotton belt, than any <lb />
other article made in the State. It <lb />
is the Cox cotton planter, made by <lb />
the A. G. Cox Manufacturing Com- <lb />
at hundreds and <lb />
hundreds of which go into every cot- <lb />
ton growing State. It has merit, is <lb />
extensively advertised, hence is known <lb />
everywhere that cotton is raised. If <lb />
other manufacturers and dealers <lb />
would follow this example of the <lb />
right kind of publicity they would <lb />
gain recognition. The lack of <lb />
is truly a hold back to the <lb />
State's progress. <lb />
When Joe King he <lb />
buckled down lo that paragraph col- <lb />
In the Durham Herald without <lb />
saying a word as to where he had <lb />
been or how many fish he caught <lb />
Harrow While You Plow. <lb />
A to the Oklahoma Farm <lb />
Journal <lb />
Everyone in the semi-arid country <lb />
who has tried it has recognized the <lb />
benefits of following each half-day <lb />
or day's plowing with the harrow <lb />
before turning out of the field, but <lb />
many of us, especially on hot days, <lb />
hate to get off of the smooth riding <lb />
plow and take up the toughest of <lb />
farm, following of the <lb />
row over the soft ground. Then again, <lb />
we get in a hurry and decide to finish <lb />
this hitching to the <lb />
harrow, and a lot of valuable <lb />
is lost that should have been <lb />
saved and the ground is not in the <lb />
tilth it should be. <lb />
When I first saw advertised a <lb />
row attachment for a plow I exclaim- <lb />
ed, But like most of my <lb />
brothers, when I began to figure on <lb />
the cost, added to the large amount <lb />
already invested in farm machinery <lb />
that I haven't shed-room to take care <lb />
of, like them, I paused. But I could <lb />
not get that idea out of my head. I <lb />
never hitched to the plow without <lb />
the, idea incessantly revolving in my <lb />
mind and urging me to while <lb />
And I solved the problem <lb />
I made a harrow that will do the <lb />
work, do it well, and it cost <lb />
of cents <lb />
I picked up two pieces of and <lb />
one piece three feet long, and <lb />
made them into a-harrow with a <lb />
three-foot spread, and nailed a <lb />
brace across the back end. Went to <lb />
the hardware store and bought a <lb />
dime's worth of 40-penny wire hails <lb />
and drove half of them into the <lb />
row so they would cut four inches <lb />
apart, giving them a slight back slope <lb />
so they would not gather the trash; <lb />
put a clevis on the front end and ran <lb />
a stout wire from it to the front of <lb />
the plow-frame. Then bent a loop in <lb />
the thread end of an old wagon end- <lb />
gate rod, ran the clevis bolt and the <lb />
harrow through the eye of the rod <lb />
and wired the loop end to the back <lb />
end of the plow-frame <lb />
ed as I plowed <lb />
It is so simple anyone can make it <lb />
so cheap all can afford it, and does <lb />
such fine work everyone should have <lb />
it It so light it does not cause a <lb />
side-draft on the plow <lb />
and does not appear to make any <lb />
more weight for the team. <lb />
I use it on a 16-inch plow and as <lb />
it gives two to the fresh- <lb />
turned land it leaves it in <lb />
shape. Try it. <lb />
this was cruel Which being true, <lb />
how are you going to kill a chicken <lb />
For the benefit of the lady who <lb />
phoned today, we might state that we <lb />
once knew a man bothered with <lb />
pigeons belonging to a neighbor who <lb />
fixed them. He placed three or four <lb />
fish hooks, baited with corn, the line <lb />
being fastened to the ground, around <lb />
his garden. In half an hour each hook <lb />
had a pigeon. He kept this up, quietly <lb />
of course, until the supply of pigeons <lb />
gave out. but the owner never knew <lb />
what went with his pigeons. This, <lb />
however, would be extreme cruelty. <lb />
So really after all we do not know <lb />
what advice to give the good woman. <lb />
She might kill her neighbors who <lb />
will not keep their chickens confined, <lb />
but she would not like to be electro- <lb />
for Re- <lb />
cord. <lb />
About Chickens. <lb />
The Record receives requests every <lb />
few days, especially from the women <lb />
folk, to for allowing chick- <lb />
ens to roam at large and <lb />
on gardens and lawns. A mighty <lb />
good woman, who would not hurt a <lb />
flea, phoned today that her neighbors <lb />
the best kind of neighbors, too <lb />
kept a large number of chickens and <lb />
that her lawn had been ruined by the <lb />
chickens forever scratching around <lb />
the flowers. She wanted to know if <lb />
there was any redress. <lb />
Might kill the chickens, but she <lb />
could be indicted for Cruelty to <lb />
Not long ago a man was indict-, <lb />
ed for chopping a rooster's off <lb />
with an this being called cruel. <lb />
The defendant escaped on a <lb />
but is said the Supreme court <lb />
has held that cutting off a chicken's <lb />
head is cruelty. How about the good <lb />
old way of the head off <lb />
grab the fowl by the neck and ring <lb />
and ring until the head comes off <lb />
Would not the Supremo court say <lb />
Leslie's to Boom the South. <lb />
Many of the great northern papers <lb />
and magazines have been attracted <lb />
by the resources of the south and <lb />
there is hardly an issue that does <lb />
not contain something concerning the <lb />
progress of this great part of the <lb />
country and the fine opportunities it <lb />
holds in store. Of course, some of <lb />
them are looking for business in the <lb />
south, for the southern communities <lb />
are spending good money to advertise <lb />
themselves, but, outside of that, <lb />
many of the greatest publications in <lb />
America are devoting much space to <lb />
gratuitous information about the <lb />
south. <lb />
Quite naturally the south is <lb />
much progress that <lb />
live publications would get far be- <lb />
hind the times were they not to keep <lb />
up with the developments in Dixie, <lb />
Southern activity is compelling con- <lb />
publicity of a general <lb />
but the south has become inter- <lb />
in a business way to the <lb />
cations which have large circulation <lb />
in this country and Europe. South- <lb />
advertising is making it worth <lb />
While for many newspapers and <lb />
to send special representatives <lb />
south to cater to our desire for a <lb />
class of publicity that is expected <lb />
to count for something. <lb />
A publication so consequential and <lb />
influential as Leslie's Weekly has an- <lb />
that its issue of April 6th, <lb />
will be special devoted <lb />
exclusively to the astounding pro- <lb />
and development of the south. <lb />
It proposes to feature articles <lb />
ally calculated to exploit the present <lb />
prosperous and promising conditions <lb />
in the south. We may look, therefore <lb />
for a peculiarly interesting and val- <lb />
edition of Leslie's, according to <lb />
the plan of which the governors of <lb />
each southern state will contribute <lb />
personal statements concerning con- <lb />
in the respective states. Les- <lb />
editorial page also will be turn- <lb />
ed over to some of the south's best <lb />
known editors, while one of the <lb />
articles will be written by John <lb />
M. Parker, of New Orleans, president <lb />
the Southern Commercial Con- <lb />
Mr. Parker's article will be <lb />
entitled Greater Nation Through <lb />
a Greater <lb />
The Star heretofore has emphasized <lb />
the fact that this is the publicity era <lb />
for the south, and the communities <lb />
which are going to make the most of <lb />
it are those which are going at it <lb />
Star. <lb />
have become known since <lb />
the present owner of the collection <lb />
Benjamin P. Field, of Babylon. Long <lb />
Island, announced his intention of <lb />
moving to Florida and taking the box <lb />
with him. He will leave on Friday, <lb />
and it will be the first time the box <lb />
and its contents have ever been taken <lb />
out of Long Island, where the <lb />
were collected. <lb />
Mr. Field's great-grandfather, also <lb />
named Benjamin P. Field, made the <lb />
in 1789. Besides the news- <lb />
papers telling of Washington's <lb />
there are a number of fore- <lb />
coins that are said to be valuable <lb />
When the collection was given to Mr. <lb />
Field's too, was <lb />
named Benjamin P. con- <lb />
a double box of tin, in which <lb />
he placed the curios. The box <lb />
was put inside one of cherry, which <lb />
in turn was placed inside one of <lb />
galvanized iron. <lb />
When Mr. Field obtained posses- <lb />
of the collection he agreed to <lb />
pass it on to his son, who was also to <lb />
be named Benjamin P. Field. Al- <lb />
though young Field will receive the <lb />
box on his twenty-first birthday, he <lb />
will have to agree not to open it until <lb />
such having been the wish of <lb />
the first Benjamin P. <lb />
York American. <lb />
Washington Curios Sealed <lb />
The strange provisions made for <lb />
safeguarding a box of curios collect- <lb />
ed during George Washington's time <lb />
and including accounts of his <lb />
and Poor Men. <lb />
It is frequently asserted that the <lb />
church too often turns the <lb />
to the poor man and <lb />
comes the rich. The truth is, how- <lb />
ever, that such is not the attitude <lb />
of the church as such, and that man- <lb />
of that sort of <lb />
are not characteristic of the church <lb />
as a whole. As a matter of fact, the <lb />
so called, who pretends <lb />
to have a on this score, <lb />
spends more time complaining about <lb />
the attitude of the church toward <lb />
him than he spends going to church. <lb />
Most exceptions prove the rules to <lb />
which they are exceptions and it is <lb />
only a coincidence, if it is true, that <lb />
the church contains more rich <lb />
than poor people. <lb />
The church can be nothing but <lb />
what the people who attend it make <lb />
it, and it is illogical to plead an ab- <lb />
of where presence <lb />
is not only a right but a duty. If <lb />
the stay away from <lb />
church they are sleeping on their <lb />
the lawyers <lb />
their duty as well. It is <lb />
that lines of this sort should be <lb />
drawn, but often those who do the <lb />
most complaining are the ones who <lb />
draw the lines. The church is the <lb />
poor man's home and hearthstone <lb />
and the question of is one <lb />
of the smallest problems that <lb />
confront him. To draw such lines <lb />
is paying more attention to the god <lb />
of mammon than to the God of love. <lb />
On a per capita basis the financial <lb />
possessions of the churches today are <lb />
very much smaller than many <lb />
imagine them to be, for the <lb />
overwhelming majority of the church <lb />
members are by no means wealthy <lb />
hardily even well-to-do. Much of <lb />
the trouble which has resulted in the <lb />
existence of this whole <lb />
with people who aside. <lb />
of doing <lb />
. rights in i which <lb />
i own. as as It be- <lb />
longs to people of wealth. The com- <lb />
plaint about a lack of in <lb />
the church is often only an excuse <lb />
for evading duties and responsibilities <lb />
When a man is faithful to his church <lb />
and contributes his it <lb />
be is just as much his duty <lb />
to welcome the wealthy man as it is <lb />
the duty of the faithful wealthy <lb />
to welcome some other man. The <lb />
church is one place where there can <lb />
be no inequality of rights; and that <lb />
fact has helped the church to live <lb />
and flourish through ages when other <lb />
institutions have failed and decayed. <lb />
Greensboro News. <lb />
Training a Dog to Steal <lb />
Who says the colored brother <lb />
enterprise, ingenuity or talent t <lb />
George Jones, of Berkley, Va., has a <lb />
trained dog. He taught the dog to <lb />
steal chickens scientifically, seizing <lb />
a fowl by the throat so it could not <lb />
cackle and conveying to his <lb />
hiding safely near by. By this pro- <lb />
a roost would be deprived in a <lb />
night without a sound of invasion <lb />
and without peril to skin. No <lb />
doubt after each theft the dog would <lb />
wag his tail and congratulate him- <lb />
self as an honest, faithful and useful <lb />
he was according to his <lb />
lights. By a stretch of the law <lb />
George was convicted and sent to the <lb />
rock pile, along with his dog; and <lb />
the dog actually stole chickens and <lb />
carried them to the convict camp to <lb />
his master. <lb />
This is the most <lb />
curing plan yet discovered. It is <lb />
better even than the invention of the <lb />
soldiers in the war, consisting of a <lb />
buggy whip and at the small end of <lb />
it a weighted cord which by a deft <lb />
movement could be wrapped about <lb />
the neck of a sleeping chicken at <lb />
almost any height or distance and <lb />
the victim yanked off the perch and <lb />
drawn to hand without a protest <lb />
a struggle. Roanoke Times <lb />
Blessings in Disguise. <lb />
High priced labor and scarcity of <lb />
labor are blessings in disguise for <lb />
he Southern farmer. Necessity will <lb />
compel the farmer to put into <lb />
intelligent methods and economic <lb />
principles. He must get out of the <lb />
old, stupid, careless and indifferent <lb />
way. He must put life-giving <lb />
mus into his dead soil and deepen <lb />
the soil until it will yield the high- <lb />
est return for the labor invested. He <lb />
must realize that his soil is his cap- <lb />
ital stock and that any kind of <lb />
that does not show an increase <lb />
in the capital stock <lb />
must stagnate and in the end result <lb />
in Union Farmer. <lb />
One thing is certain, and this is <lb />
that the Southern farmers must rapid- <lb />
as possible substitute horse-power <lb />
and machinery for much human <lb />
labor. There are plenty of laborers <lb />
if their labor was made more effect- <lb />
through the use of machinery as <lb />
is done in the F. Massey, <lb />
in Progressive Farmer. <lb />
RECEIVER'S SALE, <lb />
On Saturday, March 25th, 1911, at <lb />
o'clock, m., I will offer for <lb />
at public auction, in the town of <lb />
Vanceboro, N. C, to the highest bid- <lb />
all the stock of goods, wares, <lb />
merchandise, store fixtures, etc., for- <lb />
belonging to the <lb />
Supply Company. This stock of <lb />
goods will inventory One <lb />
H. P. Atlas boiler and one <lb />
H. P. Atlas engine, one <lb />
System gin outfit, 2-60 saw gins, <lb />
steam press, wagon, scales, pulleys <lb />
and belts. One town lot feet front <lb />
and fronting feet on navigable <lb />
stream, also the standing timber on <lb />
acres of land. This timber will <lb />
be sold for periods of to years. <lb />
Also several notes, secured by real <lb />
estate mortgage, amounting to <lb />
If interested write. <lb />
J. B. HARVEY, Receiver, <lb />
inch Vanceboro, N. C. <lb />
Subscribe to The Reflector. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018138_tn_0006" n="6" />
                <p>
Sr <lb />
PROCEEDINGS OF <lb />
AT THE <lb />
REGULAR MARCH MEETING <lb />
The Carolina Faro and The Eastern <lb />
PRESSURE OF <lb />
TOWS BOY I PAIR OF <lb />
Committee Report of <lb />
r Property <lb />
Matters Re- <lb />
quiring Attention of the Alder- <lb />
men. <lb />
The board of aldermen met in reg- <lb />
monthly session, Thursday night, <lb />
all eight of the members present. In <lb />
the absence of Mayor Woolen, Alder- <lb />
man Flanagan, mayor protein, <lb />
sided. <lb />
The street committee reported <lb />
mm i work been done the past <lb />
i i cleaning drains, putting in <lb />
Si and trimming shade trees. In <lb />
to the drain on Button Lane <lb />
th committee recommended extend- <lb />
the drain down the lane to the <lb />
The committee also reported <lb />
that a corner had been established <lb />
at the property on <lb />
streets, and a corner at <lb />
the Norfolk Southern railroad prop- <lb />
Tenth street. <lb />
respect to the ditch the <lb />
recommended that tiling <lb />
to put in and the ditch filled. <lb />
The street committee was <lb />
to have filled an old well on Read <lb />
street. <lb />
The finance committee reported <lb />
were in condition <lb />
I id recommended that interest be <lb />
paid for j days on notes due the <lb />
bank, with extension for that <lb />
No other standing committee had <lb />
any report. <lb />
The Fourth street paving matter <lb />
referred to the sidewalk com- <lb />
with power to act, and if <lb />
lay the portion <lb />
of cement sidewalk. <lb />
An error in the taxes of the Green- <lb />
ville Banking Trust Company was <lb />
tiered <lb />
T. A. Duke asked permission to <lb />
tell on the streets fish caught In his <lb />
The matter was referred to <lb />
the market committee with <lb />
to provide him a fish stall in the <lb />
market house. <lb />
R. T. Evans and It. W. King were <lb />
relieved from poll tax for 1910, <lb />
ed in error. <lb />
Aldermen Nobles and Van Dyke <lb />
were authorized to have the hand <lb />
fire engine repaired. <lb />
Aldermen Edwards and Nobles were <lb />
to purchase a pair of <lb />
mules for the town. <lb />
as approved by the finance <lb />
were ordered paid. <lb />
Ti o clerk was instructed to get <lb />
up statement of amounts due the <lb />
for paving and curbing and turn <lb />
r lo the finance <lb />
Man Who Stands for Prim <lb />
Will Command v <lb />
Long since the Louisiana <lb />
surrendered to the doctrine of , <lb />
because of the inter- <lb />
est of the State. Later on, our N <lb />
Carolina representatives, with one <lb />
tingle conception, listened to the <lb />
same song of the siren on the <lb />
schedule, am last week two or <lb />
three of our trusted leaders refused <lb />
to vote for the Canadian reciprocity <lb />
agreement, for fear the farmers <lb />
how many crimes have been com <lb />
in the name of the and <lb />
the mica miners would suffer. The <lb />
business question, with some men, <lb />
has come to be the biggest of all <lb />
questions. Senator Tilman brutally <lb />
blurted out the truth several years <lb />
; remark as an ex u <lb />
for his vote . certain <lb />
that since the going to <lb />
be banded out he was determined <lb />
that his section should have I <lb />
share. Mines the world. <lb />
Before if; power falls pros- <lb />
men ;. ; the <lb />
the sh themselves <lb />
at. and men the .-. <lb />
sign of the times -.- . s , <lb />
weakly yield to the of the <lb />
dollar, ignoring the I rut a <lb />
in this world a.-e some <lb />
things that are bettor than mo . <lb />
What If the farmers do fail <lb />
a bushel for their corn, <lb />
the whole nation r because any <lb />
one class of men. however, <lb />
or Intelligent or honorable . <lb />
profit thereby. And i e the <lb />
price of mien reduced, must the <lb />
nation be deprived of a law that will <lb />
lower the price of the of <lb />
life, that account it la refresh- <lb />
lug, however, that a majority of our <lb />
RAINY DAYS <lb />
to Life Us more uPs <lb />
downs. now. while are <lb />
making, yon ought to be Raving; then <lb />
lion the downs come you ail <lb />
something to fall Lack on. <lb />
Where is the money you have been <lb />
earning all these years You spent it <lb />
and somebody else put it in the bank. <lb />
Why don't yon put own money in <lb />
the bank for why let the other <lb />
fellow save what you cam <lb />
INDEPENDENT <lb />
A S <lb />
STAR A BANK <lb />
with<lb />
I THE NATIONAL BANK <lb />
of Greenville, N. C. <lb />
F. G. JAMES, J. Cashier <lb />
with <lb />
national law makers stood <lb />
President Taft In this vital matter <lb />
and saved the day. This g In <lb />
the dust before the demands of <lb />
Is growing tiresome, <lb />
and the time is coining back when <lb />
who stands upon <lb />
rather than upon financial <lb />
will command the <lb />
and admiration of the public- <lb />
Charity and Children. <lb />
I Atlantic Coast Line Railroad <lb />
I SCHEDULES <lb />
Between Norfolk, Washington, Plymouth, Green- <lb />
ville, and Effective November 1st, 1910. <lb />
clerk was Instructed to write anyone. <lb />
International Harvester Company <lb />
l to machinery they had <lb />
in the town In June, 1910, <lb />
which was not listed for taxation. <lb />
I Rise Remark. <lb />
Many things are well done that are <lb />
not worth doing. <lb />
Keep busy and you'll nave no time <lb />
to be miserable. <lb />
After all, intuition is but another <lb />
word for feminine suspicion. <lb />
Of two evils choose neither. <lb />
All men are equal at birth and <lb />
death. <lb />
Some men's only claim to <lb />
is a pair of white duck trousers <lb />
or a three-colored hat band. <lb />
Most everybody wishes that be <lb />
could live his life over again, but <lb />
few would live much better. <lb />
Eloquence is the truth well told. <lb />
An echo is the shadow of a <lb />
A Christian doesn't have to tell <lb />
Ar. <lb />
At. <lb />
Ar, <lb />
Ar. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
Norfolk <lb />
Hobgood <lb />
Hobgood <lb />
Washington <lb />
Plymouth <lb />
Greenville <lb />
Kinston <lb />
Ar. <lb />
Ar.<lb />
For further information, address nearest ticket <lb />
or W. WARD, Ticket Agent Green- <lb />
C. <lb />
W. J. P. T. M. T. C. WHITE, G. P. A <lb />
WILMINGTON, N. C. <lb />
SELL INSURANCE <lb />
Old Veteran Dead. <lb />
Brown, of Falkland <lb />
few days ago. He <lb />
was about years of age and a <lb />
confederate vi <lb />
FOR THE <lb />
Imagination causes more aches and <lb />
pains than all ailments. <lb />
People with of <lb />
likely to he unpopular- and <lb />
Woman's Homo C union <lb />
C . you into the at nigh <lb />
beyond the stars <lb />
it Works <lb />
of the marvelous in <lb />
policy with tho Old Mutual Life <lb />
Company, of New v ., , <lb />
an on. <lb />
Reed it and <lb />
j- Harries, district agent <lb />
Central Insurance <lb />
Co. <lb />
and Sheet Metal Wot <lb />
Tin <lb />
J. i. JENKINS, <lb />
Work, <lb />
i sea <lb />
ham, N. c. <lb />
The Carolina Rome and Farm and The Eastern <lb />
ONE MULE CAUSED <lb />
A GENERAL MIX-UP <lb />
LOST CANADA. <lb />
STARTED WITH A BALE OF HAY. <lb />
Rut Came To An End With Only <lb />
Small Damage. <lb />
Friday afternoon a mule drawing <lb />
la cart In which were three men, was <lb />
coming up Third street. One of the <lb />
men sat in front driving, while the <lb />
I other two sat on a bale of hay be- <lb />
hind. Just before reaching Evans <lb />
street that bale of hay took a notion <lb />
to tumble out of the cart, and it also <lb />
rolled out the two men who thought <lb />
they were holding it down, the hay <lb />
and men piling in the street together. <lb />
This frightened the mule and he <lb />
jumped off for a run, giving the <lb />
driver all he wanted to attend to. <lb />
The split log drag drawn by a pair <lb />
of mules at work on Third street <lb />
at the time, going westward, and the <lb />
runaway mule to dodge this outfit <lb />
hung a wheel of the cart into the <lb />
wheel of a buggy hitched to a horse <lb />
tied in front of Dr. S. of- <lb />
The collision of the two vehicles <lb />
upset the cart and threw the driver <lb />
out into the split log drag, but the <lb />
driver of the drag held his mules <lb />
and they did not seem to mind the <lb />
extra weight on their load. The <lb />
shafts of the buggy were broken and <lb />
the horse between them turned <lb />
around with his head to the buggy <lb />
to get a view of what was going on, <lb />
but did not break the tie rein and <lb />
get away. <lb />
The running mule went only a lit- <lb />
further when the cart wheel tan- <lb />
with a telephone pole in front <lb />
of Mr. J. Q. and things came <lb />
to a stand still, except the crowd of <lb />
folks attracted by it rushing up to <lb />
see what had happened. The sud- <lb />
den taking-up of the mule at the <lb />
telephone pole caused him also to <lb />
reverse ends, so that his head instead <lb />
of his tail was next to the cart. <lb />
It was an amusing spectacle from <lb />
start to finish, and about the only <lb />
damage out of it all was the broken <lb />
buggy shafts. <lb />
A Printer's Love Letter Up to Date- <lb />
A printer man was once assailed <lb />
By Cupid, and his heart Impaled <lb />
With love's keen dart <lb />
This printer ran a Linotype; <lb />
One day he thought the time was ripe <lb />
To show his heart. <lb />
He guess I'd better write. <lb />
Declare myself in black and white <lb />
I'll send a letter. <lb />
But I'm so busy I can't think <lb />
To put it down with pen and ink <lb />
On my machine I'll set <lb />
way the letter ran <lb />
like to ask you if you can <lb />
Become my queen <lb />
I love you like <lb />
ff <lb />
tree <lb />
machine <lb />
In a hurry <lb />
I love you, dear, so don't you worry <lb />
This I mean. <lb />
I love you like<lb />
This machine <lb />
The maiden at once understood, <lb />
As any winter's love one would, <lb />
This language dim, <lb />
A case of she knew, I trow, <lb />
Deciphered it; this maiden now <lb />
Makes pie for him <lb />
The Exhaust Pipe, Chicago. <lb />
Would Have Joined <lb />
ion But for Jay's Attack. <lb />
But for an exhibition of religious <lb />
bigotry at the of the <lb />
can revolution, Canada, with which <lb />
the United States is now seeking a <lb />
reciprocity treaty, would most prob- <lb />
ably have joined the colonies in the <lb />
war against England and would mo. <lb />
probably be a part of the Union to- <lb />
day. Had the two sections joined <lb />
hands, great would have been the re- <lb />
The revolutionary war would <lb />
have been shorter; the war of 1812 <lb />
would probably never have taken <lb />
place. The North would have had <lb />
such predominating influence over <lb />
the South that the slavery question <lb />
would have never divided the Union, <lb />
and the war between the States <lb />
would have never been fought. There <lb />
would have been other results. There <lb />
would be no reciprocity treaty pend- <lb />
today and the country would not <lb />
be facing the prospect of having <lb />
extra session of congress its <lb />
In the beginning of the revolution- <lb />
struggle Canada was favorably <lb />
disposed toward the <lb />
would most probably have joined <lb />
the war against but for <lb />
untimely display of bigotry. Three <lb />
noted had exerted them- <lb />
selves to establish friendly relations <lb />
between the colonies Canada. <lb />
They were Charles Carroll, of Carrol- <lb />
ton, the Rev. John Carroll, a relative <lb />
later Catholic archbishop of <lb />
more, and Samuel Chase, with Ben- <lb />
Franklin, of Pennsylvania. <lb />
They were sent by the Continental <lb />
Congress to Canada on the embassy, <lb />
which had the effect of securing for <lb />
the patriots the neutrality <lb />
of the population. <lb />
While the American ambassadors <lb />
were endeavoring in Montreal to en- <lb />
list Canadian sympathy there came <lb />
to that city an address to the Ca- <lb />
people from the Continental <lb />
Congress, in which John Jay, the <lb />
writer of the address, alluded to the <lb />
Catholic religion, dear to every <lb />
heart, as <lb />
which had deluged their land in blood <lb />
and diffused impiety, persecution, <lb />
murder, and rebellion through every <lb />
part of the That the <lb />
in the face of that open in- <lb />
to the Canadian Catholics, were <lb />
able to secure their neutrality was <lb />
certainly a great diplomatic victory, <lb />
and yet that is what they did <lb />
Had Jay's bigotry not shown <lb />
itself as it did, there is scarcely a <lb />
doubt that Canada would have joined <lb />
hands with the American colonies <lb />
against Great Britain and now form <lb />
a part of the United <lb />
the Baltimore American. <lb />
Most of the words the baby can say <lb />
he can't, but you fib about them. <lb />
A Fierce Night Alarm. <lb />
Is the hoarse, startling cough of a <lb />
child, suddenly attacked by croup. <lb />
Often it aroused Lewis of <lb />
Manchester, O., R. No. for their <lb />
four children were greatly subject to <lb />
croup. in severe <lb />
he wrote, wore afraid they would <lb />
die, but since we proved what a <lb />
remedy Dr. King's New Discovery <lb />
is, we have no fear. We rely on it <lb />
for croup and for coughs, colds or any <lb />
throat or lung So do thou- <lb />
sands of others. So may you. <lb />
ma, hay fever, whooping <lb />
cough, hemorrhages before it. <lb />
and Trial bottle free. Sold by <lb />
all druggists.<lb />
IS <lb />
THE <lb />
W. L. DOUGLAS, the great Boston shoe E <lb />
manufacturer and former Governor of <lb />
first saved and banked he got <lb />
for making and mending shoes. This was his <lb />
start in business. Today he is worth many <lb />
millions. <lb />
Make OUR Bank YOUR Bank. <lb />
We pay interest on Time <lb />
Certificates at per cent. <lb />
The Bank of Greenville <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb />
S. <lb />
Spring and Summer Courses for Teachers <lb />
1911 Spring Term, March 14th to May weeks. Sum- <lb />
mer Term, June 8th to July weeks. <lb />
THE AIM OF THE COURSE TO BETTER EQUIP <lb />
THE TEACHER FOB HIS WORK. <lb />
Text Those used in the public schools of the State <lb />
For further information, address, <lb />
H. WEIGHT, Pres <lb />
N. C. <lb />
J. S. MOORING <lb />
General Merchandise <lb />
Buyer of Cotton Count Produce <lb />
FIVE POINTS, GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
C. T. <lb />
BIG STORE HOME FOR EVERYBODY <lb />
Gone to Sew York. <lb />
Frank Wilson, the king clothier, <lb />
loft ibis morning for New York to <lb />
purchase spring goods. It will pay <lb />
to await his return before buying, as <lb />
his line of spring clothing, shoes, hats <lb />
and men's furnishings will he more <lb />
complete this season than they have <lb />
ever been. Come and see. <lb />
Carolina Club Social. <lb />
Next Friday night Carolina Club <lb />
will have another informal social <lb />
meeting in the club rooms. Several <lb />
ladies have kindly consented to take <lb />
part and there will be a good <lb />
cal program. Those who attended <lb />
the last monthly social meeting re- <lb />
member how delightful it was. The <lb />
ladies are cordially invited to these <lb />
social meetings of the club. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018138_tn_0007" n="7" />
                <p>
The Homo and M The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
OUR AYDEN <lb />
IN CHARGE OF R. W. SMITH <lb />
Agent of The Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb />
Eastern Reflector for Ayden and vicinity. <lb />
Advertising rates furnished <lb />
Ayden, X. v. <lb />
who for a long <lb />
ill, <lb />
baa general manager of the <lb />
Ayden Lumber plant has re- <lb />
signed bis position, and taken charge <lb />
mill or lumber plant near <lb />
Mr. Newton Smith, a cotton <lb />
seed broker, of Baltimore, <lb />
Wednesday in town, and made <lb />
a favorable impression on some <lb />
our business men. <lb />
Mrs, ft. Smith and little Eugene <lb />
spending tho week at Kinston. <lb />
Mr. w. P. Hart and Messrs. Han <lb />
and Harrington, of Kinston, have <lb />
purchased a largo boat and will <lb />
run a schedule from Bern <lb />
to Seven Springs, carrying both <lb />
and passengers. <lb />
Allen Jones is sick at his <lb />
homo near here. <lb />
Hog cholera seems to be raging <lb />
this winter, much to the regret <lb />
our farmers. <lb />
Mr. B. S. Sheppard, Jr., of <lb />
Ville, was in town Friday working <lb />
Mr. Jesse Wingate, who has bee. <lb />
attending a business college out <lb />
west, returned home Thursday, look <lb />
well. <lb />
Glad to see our old friend, <lb />
H out again. He has been <lb />
for Borne lime. Mr. was a faith- <lb />
in the late war. Now h <lb />
and aged wife are being cared <lb />
by the good old county of Pitt. <lb />
Mr. J. J. May, who has been con <lb />
to his bed several days with <lb />
able to out again. <lb />
fertilizer salesmen seem to b <lb />
i. mod because the farmers are not <lb />
as much fertilizers up to <lb />
as usual from the merchants. <lb />
Ayden, C, March John <lb />
Cox has purchased of Mr. <lb />
Cox acres of land near <lb />
lens roads for This k <lb />
wants. Our stock Is more com <lb />
than ever. j. R. Smith Company. <lb />
Hon. Claude Kitchin been i <lb />
to deliver the address <lb />
closing of our graded school; <lb />
Stoves and cooking ware, furniture, <lb />
fuel, lime, for cash or Installment <lb />
J. It. Smith Company. <lb />
Why should the politician rage and <lb />
the voters Imagine a vain thing The <lb />
Pitt county bill was so good <lb />
to be abolished before it was <lb />
tested, to see how much pressure it <lb />
would bear. The <lb />
.-. <lb />
Oil <lb />
estate of the late Mrs <lb />
a part of <lb />
Smith. It goes to prove that <lb />
have gene to hustling in that <lb />
locality since Mr. Richard <lb />
has purchased the Smith estate from <lb />
Mr. Cox, and shows the won- <lb />
effect a good, progressive man <lb />
; as a community and that <lb />
is catching. Mr. <lb />
has opened new ditches, built <lb />
fences end erected additional <lb />
a homes on his farm. <lb />
Mica Sarah Harris, daughter of Mr. <lb />
Harris, who has been sick for <lb />
Ore weeks died Sunday and <lb />
burled Monday at the Spencer <lb />
Han is one mile from town. <lb />
J. H. or Kinston. held <lb />
in the Episcopal church a <lb />
night. <lb />
Mr. E. a. Cox contemplates moving <lb />
from here to Greensboro, <lb />
i the of work. <lb />
who has been <lb />
wing for a long time, died Mon- <lb />
v evening. She leaves several <lb />
cut, but Pitt's officers are like <lb />
Senator Bailey, of Texas. hi <lb />
recanted before the hole was Oil I. <lb />
Miss Clara Forest left for the <lb />
northern markets Monday to buy <lb />
spring millinery. <lb />
Messrs. R. c. Cannon and son, Al- <lb />
returned from Baltimore <lb />
day. <lb />
Yes, will open the clock again <lb />
first and third Thursdays in <lb />
month at o'clock. Everybody come <lb />
trade, get tickets and bring th <lb />
give tickets for produce J. <lb />
Smith Company. <lb />
Rev. George Wheeler, <lb />
burg, a Seminary student, hi ring <lb />
Sacred history left <lb />
for his home. <lb />
If we should have a lire, where is <lb />
the town pump and and wonder <lb />
if it would work Or would it need <lb />
repairs City fathers, get it ready. <lb />
month is windy March. <lb />
Mr. Henry Stokes tells us I Stokes <lb />
tribe of Pitt county have fallen heir <lb />
to an estate worth three We <lb />
will investigate this and write more <lb />
about it In The Daily Reflector, and <lb />
this is a choice time to subscribe. <lb />
Our spring goods beau- <lb />
Come and see. J. R. Smith <lb />
Company. <lb />
NEW FOB REFORM <lb />
traveling Hen Submit Entirely New <lb />
; Railroad Officials. <lb />
of the leading <lb />
organization In <lb />
Georgia believe they have id a <lb />
rule reform <lb />
and the <lb />
the time . . <lb />
royal of the railway ;.; f., <lb />
At a meeting of tho central com <lb />
held at the office of H. M <lb />
afternoon, at <lb />
Messrs. Anderson, J. H. An- <lb />
s. and H. m <lb />
Ashe were present, it was decided t <lb />
submit this proposition to the in- <lb />
railroad officials, and a meet <lb />
with them has been asked for. <lb />
The new mileage idea is radical <lb />
it is stated, both from tin <lb />
system now in vogue in Georgia, <lb />
from the improvement as <lb />
demanded by the traveling men. t <lb />
fact, it is a scheme newly invented <lb />
which, if it proves to be as <lb />
its advocates hope, will revolution <lb />
the mileage <lb />
Journal. <lb />
LECTURE AT <lb />
By Doctor A. A. Kent, of <lb />
County. <lb />
Dr. A. A. Kent, a member of <lb />
legislature from <lb />
made an excellent talk to the as <lb />
hall of the East Carolin <lb />
Training school this <lb />
on of the Teacher t <lb />
Public <lb />
ass over the country in waves. <lb />
question. <lb />
of health and the <lb />
sickness and disease is now <lb />
importance. The doctor <lb />
that they alone cannot <lb />
his problem out. They look to th <lb />
who comes In direct <lb />
the and who can <lb />
he children for co-operation. <lb />
legislature placed the superintend- <lb />
of each county on the board of <lb />
because they deemed this the <lb />
way to get the teachers interest- <lb />
id in the subject. <lb />
He with an appeal to the <lb />
student-teacher to with, <lb />
he doctor in the work against <lb />
base. <lb />
MAT, LARD FLOUR, AT F. <lb />
V. Johnston's. <lb />
Buying for Pulley Bowen. <lb />
The Reflector said <lb />
Saturday that Mrs. Georgia James <lb />
had gone to Richmond and Baltimore <lb />
to purchase millinery goods C. T. <lb />
This was an error, as <lb />
Mrs. James is with Pulley Bowen <lb />
and her trip to the fashion centers <lb />
is to make spring selections for that <lb />
OATS AND SEED CORN AT <lb />
F. V. Johnston's. <lb />
SHIP STUFF, COTTON <lb />
meal and hulls, at F. V. John- <lb />
7-ltd <lb />
I-ct Us Hear From You. <lb />
Now, kind reader, of you as <lb />
we The Reflector as much as <lb />
can look for a subscription state- <lb />
as they begin going out this <lb />
And when you get yours, <lb />
please let us have a prompt response, <lb />
ind do not treat it as though you <lb />
bought we were just mailing the <lb />
to pass away time. It <lb />
want The Reflector to be a good <lb />
do your part by paying your <lb />
inscription promptly. <lb />
SEEDS OF <lb />
at F. v. Johnston's. <lb />
ALL KINDS<lb />
OF THE CONDITION OP <lb />
THE BANK OF AYDEN <lb />
AT AYDEN, N. C. <lb />
Carolina, at the close of business, January 1911. <lb />
n. <lb />
She and her husband <lb />
lived <lb />
Arc Von <lb />
A the University <lb />
Chicago says that when you can <lb />
each of the following quest <lb />
ons in the affirmative that you arc <lb />
educated. Head and then toll us <lb />
you've it or <lb />
Has your education given sympathy <lb />
all good causes and made you <lb />
espouse them <lb />
Has it. made you public spirited <lb />
Has It made to the <lb />
weak <lb />
Have you learned bow to <lb />
friends and keep them <lb />
Do you know what it is to be ; <lb />
friend yourself <lb />
Can look an honest man or . <lb />
pure woman straight In the eye <lb />
Do you see anything to love in a <lb />
little child <lb />
Will a lonely dog follow you the <lb />
Can you be <lb />
in the mean r of <lb />
DO you I v. ; , . .; <lb />
hoeing <lb />
RESOURCES. <lb />
-rt <lb />
Loans and discounts. 61,913.02 . <lb />
pad <lb />
Overdraft <lb />
Banking house, furniture <lb />
and fixture . <lb />
Due from banks and <lb />
Cash items . <lb />
coin <lb />
less <lb />
and <lb />
Sliver <lb />
coin, Including all <lb />
minor coin <lb />
National Bank notes and <lb />
other U. S. Notes. <lb />
160.72 Surplus fund. <lb />
Undivided profits. <lb />
610.69 current expenses <lb />
taxes paid . <lb />
0.00 Deposits subject to check. <lb />
15.00 Savings deposits . <lb />
Cashier's checks <lb />
1,774.88 <lb />
Certified checks. . <lb />
5,814.00 <lb />
15,625.00 <lb />
2,427.97 <lb />
73,550.00 <lb />
26,301.30 <lb />
86.85 <lb />
38.00 <lb />
make<lb />
148,029.21 Total <lb />
143,029.21 <lb />
State of North Carolina, County of Pitt, <lb />
above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. <lb />
a R- Cashier. <lb />
and sworn to before 14th day of January <lb />
STANCILL HODGES. <lb />
B n Notary Public- <lb />
Las <lb />
Directors, <lb />
so<lb />
A o<lb />
money lo build them a church. <lb />
of Fayetteville, la leading <lb />
the work In the good cause. <lb />
If its hardware, we can fill your <lb />
Can you happy . <lb />
Can you look out 0.1 I ,,. ,,; <lb />
see anything except dollars <lb />
cents <lb />
e wish to year attention f our new line of fall goods which <lb />
c, we o, have. We have taken great care in baying- this year and we <lb />
U I WantS Ginghams No <lb />
r, <lb />
let sh. v y. u <lb />
Tripp, hart Co., Ayden, N. C, <lb />
The Carolina Home and Farm sod the <lb />
II <lb />
THE LARGEST IN THE CITY<lb />
and Store <lb />
Has just received, a of Enamelware, Glassware <lb />
Crockery and invite all to inspect it. A full line of Candies alway <lb />
-Cream and Chocolates and Etc., all at per pound. The biggest assort- <lb />
of Candies in the city-Fresh Candies timer, each week. and Store I <lb />
the place you can find anything you need <lb />
.- <lb />
TIMES <lb />
Point To Better Conditions <lb />
Ahead. <lb />
No business is quickly and <lb />
by adverse <lb />
conditions, as that of the news- <lb />
Merchants may complain, <lb />
age earners feel it, all kinds <lb />
and banks tell their troubles. <lb />
it the newspaper must accept bad <lb />
pay for them in their cost <lb />
I maintenance that goes practically <lb />
same with good or bad times, and <lb />
lot show the distress signal. An;. <lb />
ad local condition, any serious <lb />
national situation, financial, com <lb />
social, and tho press must <lb />
for the Bide. <lb />
Just at present, while here and <lb />
acre are signs of what financiers <lb />
to be the <lb />
there are other signs that <lb />
much more on tho side <lb />
letter general conditions, that ma. <lb />
lot be declared poverty times, ye. <lb />
to an increasing betterment o, <lb />
conditions. One sign <lb />
that of greatly increased ad <lb />
inquiry, that usually <lb />
in a period of trade activity ant <lb />
Industrial development. It is no. <lb />
that development companies <lb />
willing spenders for advertising <lb />
lo promote now projects. But sub <lb />
and established commercial <lb />
louses are advancing their <lb />
lines. In addition, there is ; <lb />
advertising movement <lb />
that is active as <lb />
trade houses, a class of <lb />
unknown a few years ago-. <lb />
Further, the railroads are In for ad <lb />
as never before. <lb />
years ago there were a few railroad <lb />
hat spent in tho hundreds of thou <lb />
sands, annually, today every <lb />
its advertising department <lb />
not limited to circulars and pan <lb />
but employs big <lb />
space, and this in publications w;. <lb />
their own lines. With <lb />
this advertising there must be <lb />
in every trade and <lb />
Every individual cannot help <lb />
into increased action, <lb />
lever his business. Activity <lb />
life and more of it as tho action <lb />
J gains. Conditions point to greatly <lb />
development of hitherto <lb />
latent resources, and this with re <lb />
sources now developed must result i;. <lb />
prosperous times in all sections of <lb />
this Bern Journal. <lb />
A. T. CO. PROFITS. <lb />
Over <lb />
Year. <lb />
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb />
New York, March Amer- <lb />
Tobacco Company In its annual <lb />
report made public today, announced <lb />
that its earnings for the year <lb />
I ended December 31st were <lb />
an increase over four mil- <lb />
over the previous year. <lb />
NET MACHINE. <lb />
Cleveland Invention Interests Nation- <lb />
Harvester Company. <lb />
A planter and fertilizer dis <lb />
which equals, if not outstrip <lb />
similar farm implements, has been <lb />
Invented by Mr. W. D. Lemons, ; <lb />
Cleveland county farmer. The name <lb />
the implement is <lb />
planter and and from <lb />
he opinion of those who saw <lb />
yesterday afternoon, i. <lb />
ii do everything perfectly that it h <lb />
jilt and is claimed do. Mr. <lb />
is a practical living <lb />
miles southeast of Shelby. H <lb />
worked on his Invention two years <lb />
then brought it to the <lb />
on foundry to be built. <lb />
Messrs. W. D. and Thomas J. Bab <lb />
took half Interest in the pat- <lb />
and are manufacturing it. They <lb />
re experienced In all kinds of ma- <lb />
and worked on it some time <lb />
of ore getting it perfected. With n <lb />
lo getting it placed on the mar- <lb />
Mr, J. C. Robinson, genera agent <lb />
or the International Harvester <lb />
any, the largest implement <lb />
concern in the world, was <lb />
Tuesday to witness a practical <lb />
of the new invention. <lb />
Shelby Star. <lb />
, CROSS ROADS ITEMS. <lb />
Notes in <lb />
The Neighborhood. <lb />
X Roads, March 1911. <lb />
Nora of has <lb />
visiting Miss Cox. <lb />
J. W. Garris, J. S. <lb />
A. Garris went to <lb />
day. <lb />
Mr. Charlie Venters and Miss <lb />
Cox Cox were married Thurs- <lb />
They have our best wishes. <lb />
John O. Geary looking lo- <lb />
rd to bis wedding. <lb />
Josephine Nelson, of Green- <lb />
is spending the week with her <lb />
Mrs. Joe Wilson. <lb />
Nancy Mills, of Cox's Mill, is <lb />
the week with Miss <lb />
The boys say this week will seem <lb />
Christmas week. <lb />
Mr. W. T. Harris has some fine to- <lb />
plants. <lb />
Messrs. J. W. Venters and Doll <lb />
n went to Greenville today. <lb />
Garris, of was In our <lb />
own Sunday. <lb />
Miss Bertha Stokes o spending this <lb />
eek with her sister, Mrs. Sarah <lb />
Messrs. Oscar Harris and Clove <lb />
went to Grifton Saturday. <lb />
Mr. Oscar Wilson and wife went to <lb />
Jack Saturday. <lb />
Many a man acts like a genius <lb />
when all that him is indigestion.<lb />
Can Nature be Assisted <lb />
If people born, right and after <lb />
lived right, would no <lb />
at tot medicine. Every doctor knows <lb />
a do other people. <lb />
On j i more. Whoa v. person lives <lb />
y, o acquires bodily by <lb />
heredity, m can do only very <lb />
cannot Only <lb />
claim medicines will <lb />
. Medicines may <lb />
. p Medicines may urge tho <lb />
if Nature disease, <lb />
, in arouse the <lb />
to lit against de- <lb />
r . . i J i moat that med- <lb />
Ii i. do. <lb />
A man puts his <lb />
tho fire. ho wets bis <lb />
finger in Ida than blows on it <lb />
for e effect, This it no <lb />
Ho knows it well. But it makes it <lb />
feel better for tho being. <lb />
cat produces <lb />
ox indigestion. Tho only <lb />
rational cure is to cat correctly. Yet if <lb />
r Is at hand tho pains of <lb />
can Lo mitigated, tho of <lb />
Tho medicine <lb />
not to said to have cured. It simply <lb />
palliates disagreeable symptoms. Tho <lb />
must come through right living. <lb />
Take for Instance. No one <lb />
dyspepsia. <lb />
will stimulate the stomach <lb />
; perform its function properly. Peru <lb />
will flow of <lb />
fluids, without digestion cannot <lb />
i i will increase the <lb />
of food, tho <lb />
It la admitted that all this can <lb />
by right living, there <lb />
are many who either will not <lb />
or do not know how to eat correctly <lb />
a n amount of can <lb />
done by of <lb />
A stomach that has been <lb />
tho of <lb />
very lazily. Such a stomach allows <lb />
the food to remain undigested for some <lb />
time after It i--j swallowed. <lb />
of tho food. <lb />
is tho result. This goes on week <lb />
after week, until tho blood Is poisoned <lb />
with fermentation. <lb />
is very apt lo produce rheum- <lb />
Sib 1.1. <lb />
It Is i claimed that will <lb />
Nothing will care <lb />
but correct living. But <lb />
will assist a badly <lb />
d much work. <lb />
For Larger Yields. i fanned and separated, so that <lb />
, . i but the heaviest and plumpest <lb />
The oat crop can ho Increased in ; <lb />
are put in the ground, as they have <lb />
yield by early sowing, thorough prep- <lb />
the soil before and i just <lb />
very little work afterward. Good planting with good results, but do <lb />
seed Is the greatest Importance, j not believe deep plowing is <lb />
the la the fall, then put soil or new Nor <lb />
is it necessary to plow deep every <lb />
the la with a drill as early as j yew m. three <lb />
tho season and condition or the son ls if. W. Still. <lb />
win permit. The outs should be well Ida, Kan. <lb />
If a person correct his habits, <lb />
persist in right eating and temperate <lb />
ways, undoubtedly the stomach would <lb />
right itself, the blood would rid Itself of <lb />
the poison, and everything would <lb />
right. But as Raid there are a <lb />
multitude of people who will can- <lb />
not adopt right methods of living. To <lb />
such people is B boon. A <lb />
before meals will assist tho stomach to <lb />
do its work. This prevents ferments <lb />
of tho food, brings about normal <lb />
all tho train of <lb />
follow Indigestion disappear. <lb />
other words, is helpful <lb />
those who live badly, those who <lb />
some chronic ;. <lb />
doer, not cure, but it the <lb />
powers of Nature to bring about <lb />
Tho whip does not increase the <lb />
of to pull a load, but <lb />
used it stimulates tho o <lb />
use bis powers at tho right h i i <lb />
out which ho could not have pulled <lb />
load. <lb />
This illustrates tho effect of <lb />
or any other good remedy upon .  <lb />
torn. Taken at right <lb />
forth tho powers of the human ,. <lb />
to meet tho en <lb />
and thus eats short, if <lb />
tho diseased action. <lb />
ITo one should ever to <lb />
medicine in tho place cf right <lb />
In tho end an attempt v <lb />
prove a disaster. But an occasional ; <lb />
of the right medicine at tho i <lb />
Is a godsend, and no reasonable <lb />
will lo deny it. <lb />
Those know iris <lb />
it of untold value. By by <lb />
world will get enough SO tin- <lb />
through correct living no -l <lb />
all Will be needed, that time has <lb />
not arrived. In tho meantime, <lb />
tho world U approaching <lb />
in which all <lb />
is a handy r u <lb />
have in tho house <lb />
Slight of <lb />
slight attacks of tho liver, th- <lb />
throat, bronchial tubes, lungs or bow- <lb />
els those attacks are to ind t <lb />
grave and can averted <lb />
tho Judicious nae of <lb />
Wouldn't yon like to road a few nu <lb />
solicited testimonials from <lb />
have used and stand read <lb />
to confirm tho above statements con- <lb />
it. If ;, address tho <lb />
Drug Manufacturing Co., Columbus <lb />
Ohio, and will send co-no prepaid.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018138_tn_0008" n="8" />
                <p>
The Carolina Home and and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
DO IT SOW. <lb />
Greenville People Should not <lb />
Until It is Too Late. <lb />
Walt <lb />
The appalling death rate from kid- <lb />
disease Is due In most cases to <lb />
the fact that the little kidney troubles <lb />
are usually neglected until they be- <lb />
come serious. The slight symptoms <lb />
give place to chronic disorders and <lb />
the goes gradually into the <lb />
grasp of dropsy, Brights dis- <lb />
ease, gravel or some other serious <lb />
form of kidney complaint. <lb />
If you suffer from backache, head- <lb />
aches, dizzy spells; if the kidney <lb />
are irregular of passage and <lb />
unnatural in appearance, do not de- <lb />
lay. Help the kidneys at once. <lb />
Kidney Pills are especially <lb />
for kidney cure <lb />
where others fail. Over one hundred <lb />
thousand people have recommended <lb />
them. <lb />
Here is one of the many cases in <lb />
this <lb />
R. S. Butler, Harvey St., Wash- <lb />
N. C, am well <lb />
pleased with the results that follow- <lb />
ed the use of Kidney Pills in <lb />
my case and can highly recommend <lb />
them to other kidney sufferers. I <lb />
was subject to dull pains in my <lb />
back, accompanied by sharp twinges <lb />
through my lions. Kidney <lb />
Pills removed my trouble and <lb />
me in every <lb />
For Bale by all dealers. Price <lb />
cents. Co., Buffalo, <lb />
New York, sole agents for the United <lb />
States. <lb />
Remember the <lb />
take no other. <lb />
A HEW THING IN COURT. <lb />
The Carolina Home an Farm and The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
IS. <lb />
A Novel Mental Anguish Suit in The <lb />
Court. <lb />
MARCH. <lb />
Sounds the Heralding Blasts of a <lb />
Better Month Coming. <lb />
If there is any truth in the <lb />
able adage, this and gen- <lb />
ill-mannered month, having <lb />
come in as Mary's little lamb, <lb />
and scared to the point of run- <lb />
into a schoolhouse, ought to go <lb />
out like a lion, that is, if lions go <lb />
roaring and tearing, howling and ca- <lb />
blowing, raining, slobbering, <lb />
blubbering, blustery and <lb />
around like they had no sense <lb />
and had never been to Sunday school <lb />
or a Durham county Republican <lb />
convention. That is March's <lb />
style, first or last, at one <lb />
end or other. Shaking signs loose, rat- <lb />
shingles and shutters, driving <lb />
the peach tree limbs against old <lb />
country house windows, upsetting <lb />
rickety taking liberties <lb />
with young skirts and dazzling <lb />
an appreciative universe with light- <lb />
glimpses of animated barber <lb />
poles. Poking his noisy nose every- <lb />
where, wrestling around the street <lb />
corners, groaning through the pine <lb />
woods, bothering bustling housewives <lb />
and twisting good Christian's re- <lb />
out of joint to find adequate <lb />
language in which to address their <lb />
hats. Impudent, boisterous <lb />
windy and profitless, fit emblem of <lb />
many American statesmanship, he only <lb />
Prepares the way, sounds the herald- <lb />
blasts of a better mouth coming <lb />
Durham Sun. <lb />
All sorts of things go to law these <lb />
days. For instance, here is the men- <lb />
anguish drunk suit, wherein it is <lb />
affirmed that a drunk man can be <lb />
It is reported in West Pub- <lb />
Company's Cases of Interest <lb />
An action is brought against a railroad <lb />
company to recover damages for be- <lb />
ejected from a train. Appellant <lb />
prior to purchasing his ticket, had <lb />
been drinking with some friends <lb />
whom he had met. After boarding <lb />
the train, the car being warm, he fell <lb />
into a stupor. The conductor, pass- <lb />
through, collected his ticket with- <lb />
out the passenger's knowledge. Soon <lb />
after, the conductor again demanded <lb />
a ticket of the who this <lb />
time awoke and began a fruitless <lb />
search for After hunt- <lb />
in every pocket except the <lb />
one, that of the conductor, that <lb />
official and the brakeman helped him <lb />
off. He was now left In a helpless <lb />
and deplorable condition, and more- <lb />
over, his overcoat and baggage were <lb />
left on the train. After wandering <lb />
aimlessly about for a time, he was <lb />
found by some boys who took him to <lb />
a hotel. He spent a bad night and <lb />
became so sick that a physician was <lb />
necessary. The next morning when <lb />
he he knew nothing about <lb />
being put oft the train or where he <lb />
was, or how he got there. Upon learn- <lb />
the facts, he brought this action <lb />
for being so humiliated and recover- <lb />
ed Appellant contends that <lb />
was not entitled to recover, <lb />
because when he was put off was <lb />
too drunk to understand or <lb />
what Was being done, and there- <lb />
fore, could not have been humiliated. <lb />
insists that when he regain- <lb />
ed his senses he was deeply <lb />
ed, for he had occasion frequently to <lb />
explain to his friends how he came to <lb />
be ejected from the train, thus <lb />
him much chagrin. The court of <lb />
Civil Appeals of Texas holds that it <lb />
was immaterial whether he <lb />
ed the humiliation at the very time <lb />
of his ejection, if he was prevented <lb />
from so by his inebriated con- <lb />
because to hold otherwise <lb />
would be equivalent to saying that <lb />
one committing an indignity upon <lb />
another might escape liability, if it <lb />
were shown that at the time of the <lb />
commission the person was <lb />
of or insensible to such <lb />
notwithstanding the fact that <lb />
upon regaining consciousness he <lb />
might intensely suffer by reason <lb />
thereof. The judgment was affirmed. <lb />
Charlotte Chronicle. <lb />
-The- <lb />
LEDBETTER <lb />
One seed cotton and corn planters <lb />
seed at a time-no skip no bunching Plants <lb />
a peck or more seed to the one to six in- <lb />
apart, always one seed at a time. Saves <lb />
half the work and time of chopping. Positive <lb />
force feed means absolute regularity bf drop <lb />
without cracking or crushing seed. Levels <lb />
the bed, the furrow, plants any depth <lb />
desired. See every seed as it comes from hop- <lb />
per to spout. Fully guaranteed to please <lb />
Style Leaders<lb />
N. C. <lb />
The Place to Advertise. <lb />
Let us again call the attention of <lb />
business men to the large circulation <lb />
of The Reflector, and also the fine <lb />
line of cuts we have for free use In <lb />
displaying their advertisements. If <lb />
the cut they desire is not on hand it <lb />
will be ordered from specimen sheets <lb />
that can be seen at the office. <lb />
read The Reflector and you make <lb />
no mistake in placing an attractive <lb />
advertisement before them.<lb />
j Attacks School Principal. <lb />
A severe attack on school principal, <lb />
Chas. B. Allen, of Ga., is <lb />
I thus told by him. more than <lb />
i three he writes, suffered in- <lb />
describable torture from rheumatism <lb />
liver and stomach trouble and dis- <lb />
teems to be be no place like <lb />
home most of the charity that be- <lb />
gins <lb />
How about the eternal fitness or <lb />
things when a young man sows wild <lb />
oats and reaps a grass widow. <lb />
The New Pastor. <lb />
There was joy in the hearts of the <lb />
Baptist congregation Sunday that the <lb />
church now has a pastor. Rev. C. <lb />
M. Rock, who arrived a few ago <lb />
from North to accept the <lb />
here, preached both morn- <lb />
tag and night. He is a forceful <lb />
speaker and his sermons were much <lb />
enjoyed. He made a splendid <lb />
on all who heard him. <lb />
Letter to Mr. Darden. <lb />
Greensboro, N. C, Feb. 1911, <lb />
Mr. W. A. Darden, <lb />
Ayden, N. C. <lb />
Dear <lb />
I have received a copy of The <lb />
Carolina Home and Farm and The <lb />
Eastern Reflector. I your letter <lb />
In the paper, and I thank you so eased Moneys. All failed till <lb />
very much for sending it to me. It I used Electric Bitters, but four bot- <lb />
will help us very much in our work, ties of this wonderful remedy cured <lb />
for I shall read it to our boys and me Such results are <lb />
tell them about it. I am glad to be common. Thousands bless them for <lb />
able to show them just what you are curing stomach trouble, female corn- <lb />
doing, because some of our boys, of plaints, kidney disorders, <lb />
course, have foolish ideas about them, and for new health and vigor. Try <lb />
I want them to know that a gentle- them. Only at all druggists, <lb />
man of your prominence is not . <lb />
of doing work and that you <lb />
are working early and late and take <lb />
Pride in it. I am satisfied it will have <lb />
a good and wholesome effect upon <lb />
our students. <lb />
Will to Farmville <lb />
It is ray pleasure to announce that <lb />
I have leased the Planters Ware- <lb />
house of Farmville, N. C. for a term <lb />
Thanking you very much for the years. I will manage <lb />
of the letter, and with kindest and operate the same for the sale of <lb />
T am, tobacco in a liberal and <lb />
v yours. like R. TOWNSEND <lb />
JAS. B. DUDLEY, <lb />
8-3<lb />
Costs But a Trifle to Core Catarrh. <lb />
How many readers of the Reflector <lb />
know that in Inland Australia where <lb />
the mightiest of eucalyptus trees <lb />
grow in abundance, that there is no <lb />
consumption, catarrh or disease of <lb />
the respiratory tract. <lb />
The refreshing balsam thrown out <lb />
by these trees fills the air and is <lb />
breathed into the lungs by the <lb />
and all germ life is destroyed. <lb />
If you have Catarrh you cannot go <lb />
to Inland Australia except at great <lb />
expense, but you can breath right in <lb />
your own home the same pleasant, <lb />
soothing, healing, germ killing air <lb />
you would breathe if you were- living <lb />
in the eucalyptus district of <lb />
Just breathe it is made <lb />
from Australian eucalyptus and <lb />
combined with and <lb />
other antiseptics employed in the <lb />
system. <lb />
a few drops of in the <lb />
inhaler and breathe It. As it <lb />
over the catarrh infected <lb />
it kills the germs and heals the raw. <lb />
inflamed surface. <lb />
is guaranteed to cure ca- <lb />
coughs, colds, croup and sore <lb />
throat or money Complete <lb />
Outfit including inhaler Extra <lb />
bottles of cost but cents. <lb />
Hold by Coward and drug- <lb />
gists everywhere, 2,17,27-3,10 <lb />
WILL GO BACK TO <lb />
to Conduct a Warehouse <lb />
There Next Season. <lb />
Greenville is going to lose a <lb />
tobacco man in Mr. C. It. Townsend, <lb />
who has leased a warehouse in <lb />
Farmville for next season. Mr. <lb />
Townsend came to Greenville two <lb />
years ago to take charge of one of <lb />
warehouses of the Farmers <lb />
dated Tobacco Company, and made <lb />
a host of friends among the tobacco <lb />
trade and people generally. The <lb />
burning before Christmas of the <lb />
warehouse be conducted, which will <lb />
hot be rebuilt, accountable for his <lb />
change in location. <lb />
Sew Carolina Industries. <lb />
For the week ending March 1st, the <lb />
Chattanooga Tradesman reports the <lb />
following new Industries established <lb />
in North <lb />
manufacturing j <lb />
company. <lb />
amusement com- <lb />
wood <lb />
Mt. grocery company. <lb />
Prompt Settlement. <lb />
Messrs. Moseley Bros. Agents, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Dear <lb />
I wish to thank you for the very <lb />
courteous and prompt settlement of <lb />
my fire loss of on my farm <lb />
dwelling which was recently burned <lb />
Yours very truly, <lb />
MRS. AGNES BLOUNT. <lb />
Life <lb />
Marvelous Record of 1910 <lb />
THE CLOSE OF THE SIXTY EIGHTH YEAR of the oldest company <lb />
in America shows an increased amount of insurance in force, <lb />
and an increased amount of new insurance paid for during the <lb />
year, including restorations and additions. Other notable <lb />
features marking the progress of the Company <lb />
I I <lb />
Admitted Assets <lb />
Policy Reserves <lb />
Total Income <lb />
Total Disbursements <lb />
461,834,185.00 <lb />
83,981,241.89 <lb />
66,346,555.86 <lb />
BALANCE SHEET, DECEMBER <lb />
ASSETS <lb />
Stocks <lb />
Int res; and Bents, and e <lb />
. .,. <lb />
in of col- <lb />
Cash on <lb />
on Interest I. <lb />
Deposited to pay policy claims. <lb />
8,78,055.81 <lb />
8624121.84 <lb />
LIABILITIES <lb />
Not Policy Reserves. <lb />
Other Policy Liabilities. <lb />
Premiums, Interest and Bents <lb />
paid ii advance. <lb />
Liabilities . <lb />
Reserve for claims an <lb />
reported. <lb />
Reserve for Taxes, Licensee, <lb />
etc payable In 1911. . <lb />
Dividends payable in Mil. <lb />
deserve for Deferred Dividends <lb />
and Contingencies. <lb />
188981.07 <lb />
Total Admitted A 57259,062.88 Total <lb />
H. BENTLEY Mgr., Greenville Disk<lb />
I , . <lb />
DO YOU KEEP A BANK ACCOUNT <lb />
YOU SHOULD FOR THE <lb />
Money in Bank is safe from fire and burglars; in your <lb />
home it is not. <lb />
Money in Bank is safe from careless handling; in your <lb />
pocket it is not. <lb />
Money paid by check to you a permanent re- <lb />
cash handed out does not. <lb />
Money in Bank is a starter towards economy, always <lb />
ready for use, or to be added to. <lb />
Card of Appreciation <lb />
My short of two years in Green <lb />
ville has been extremely pleasant and <lb />
with much feeling I want to thank <lb />
the kind and hospitable people tor <lb />
their many favors and courteous <lb />
the officers and <lb />
members of the Farmers Consolidated <lb />
Tobacco Co. and I wish them a great <lb />
success. <lb />
Yours very truly. <lb />
C. R, TOWNSEND <lb />
3-3 <lb />
Greenville Banking Trust Co, <lb />
is provided with every safeguard for the protection of its <lb />
depositors, and endeavors to give its customers the <lb />
Lest service. <lb />
We will be glad to have your business. <lb />
CARR, Cashier <lb />
The Blight Intemperance <lb />
Fiercer year by year must grow <lb />
struggle for the mastery among <lb />
people of the earth, and <lb />
being equal, the prize of <lb />
must go sooner or later to those <lb />
have kept their bodies <lb />
st, freest from every enervating <lb />
and their brains clearest, <lb />
befogged by any dulling agency. <lb />
Awakening China, over here, <lb />
this, has set herself first of all, <lb />
to her people from the ancient <lb />
;.,; of form of <lb />
to which they been ad- <lb />
already she has <lb />
results that have amazed the <lb />
Snail it be said that the <lb />
man In China is able to over <lb />
influences that the white man <lb />
In the South is unable to cope With <lb />
Clarence Poe, in Progressive Farm- <lb />
The <lb />
Any of the improved breeds are <lb />
satisfactory to the man who feeds <lb />
won, and none will give to <lb />
the man who requires them to <lb />
for themselves. Because <lb />
pig or the calf fails to make <lb />
to th is no reflection on the <lb />
breed. The difficulty may <lb />
be with the In member of <lb />
the i in question, but it la <lb />
, ch more likely that the fault is <lb />
Do Not Depend en The lice. <lb />
The hoe is too costly an Implement <lb />
to be depended upon, for ii. takes <lb />
man, and you will never need a <lb />
in the held if you start early with <lb />
smoothing harrow and weeder, and <lb />
if the cotton is planted in hills, there <lb />
will be little need for chopping. <lb />
For the cultivation of the hoed <lb />
crops you will need power, and we <lb />
must have the horse-power to star <lb />
It la much more likely that with the smoothing harrow and the <lb />
your management is wrong than weeder. With these you can get over <lb />
the breed or that even tho Individual the land so rapidly that you will <lb />
Is fault. We have known farmers never be caught In the grass, and <lb />
to condemn a breed from their ex- will never need to put a plow to <lb />
with one or two Individuals cover the grass In the rows, for the <lb />
these kept under conditions early use of the smoothing harrow <lb />
which would the chances of any and weeder will prevent its tar ting <lb />
of any F. Massey, In Progressive <lb />
, Farmer.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018138_tn_0009" n="9" />
                <p>
I U Mil V <lb />
PROCEEDINGS OF THE <lb />
COUNTY <lb />
OF FEBRUARY MEETING <lb />
m Carolina Home and Farm The Beg,,,,. <lb />
Paid for Current Expenses, <lb />
Salaries, and Fees Collected. <lb />
The board of county commission- <lb />
was in regular monthly session <lb />
Monday, with three of the members <lb />
present. <lb />
The following aggregate sums were <lb />
drawn on the For paupers <lb />
1240; superintendent of health <lb />
county home advertising and <lb />
printing court house <lb />
bridges and ferries clerk <lb />
superior court register of <lb />
deeds jail Inspector <lb />
smallpox sundries <lb />
officers salaries, clerk <lb />
of deeds sheriff <lb />
county stock law county <lb />
roads roads <lb />
roads Farmville <lb />
roads Greenville roads <lb />
Some errors In tax list were corrected <lb />
and exemptions made. <lb />
J. L. Mooring, constable-elect of <lb />
township, having failed to <lb />
qualify, the office was declared <lb />
cant and J. I. Jams was elected to <lb />
All the same. The latter tendered <lb />
his official bond and qualified. <lb />
The following were added to the <lb />
pauper list to receive per month <lb />
Rosa Rives, John T. James, <lb />
R. M, James Hill and Richard <lb />
Jerman. <lb />
Petitions were presented for <lb />
In school districts in and <lb />
Greenville townships, and the <lb />
were ordered. <lb />
The elections ordered at last meet- <lb />
for school districts in Farmville <lb />
and Swift Creek townships were re- <lb />
The county officers made the fol- <lb />
lowing report of fees collected for <lb />
the month of Superior <lb />
court clerk register of deeds <lb />
sheriff <lb />
Mi <lb />
REGISTERED, <lb />
That there more to a Fertilizer than <lb />
Analysis is proven conclusively by the results <lb />
obtained every year from Royster Fertilizers. I <lb />
hey are made from experience obtained by <lb />
actual field experiments of what the plant <lb />
requires, and not from ready reference <lb />
formulating. <lb />
I i in Royster Goods is <lb />
selected for its plant food value, and has its <lb />
work to do the proper time, therefore the <lb />
plant fertilized with ROYSTER goods is fed <lb />
regular from sprouting time until harvest. <lb />
I Ask your dealer for Royster goods and <lb />
see that the trade-mark is on every bag. <lb />
When you see this H. you know <lb />
Fish Fertilizer. <lb />
F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY, <lb />
FACTORIES AND SALES <lb />
NORFOLK. VA. N. C COLUMBIA <lb />
MONTGOMERY ALA<lb />
THIS DOG IS SMART. <lb />
Up Paper and Finds <lb />
Used Article. <lb />
Mr. E. B. tells us of a <lb />
smart dog he has, and says that <lb />
hereafter we ought not to be opposed <lb />
to dogs any more. Mr. lost <lb />
a driving glove and put an ad. about <lb />
U in The Reflector. When the paper <lb />
was delivered at his home that even- <lb />
lug the dog got it and chewed it up <lb />
afterwards the dog went off, found <lb />
the lost glove and carried it home in <lb />
his mouth. Now somebody please <lb />
figure it out how chewing Up the pa- <lb />
per containing the advertisement led <lb />
the dog to go and find the glove and <lb />
take it home. All the same It shows <lb />
that advertising i Tho Reflector <lb />
pays. <lb />
Marriage Licenses. <lb />
During last week Register of Deeds <lb />
Moore issued licenses to the follow- <lb />
White i <lb />
Craft and Ada Moore. <lb />
Coward and Lillie Channels <lb />
Arthur Gardner and <lb />
e. and Fleming. <lb />
H, Rives and Eva Evans. <lb />
Page and Ada Evans <lb />
WHAT THE STATE <lb />
WILL GET <lb />
THE AMOUNT REACHES <lb />
How This Is Appropriated by The <lb />
Legislature. <lb />
The appropriations bill adopted by <lb />
the general assembly makes the fol- <lb />
lowing provision for the various State <lb />
institutions for the next two <lb />
For the Home at Raleigh, <lb />
annually for maintenance, out <lb />
of which is to be paid the present de- <lb />
For the School for the Deaf and <lb />
Dumb at Morganton, annually <lb />
for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for installing water system; <lb />
annually for equipment. <lb />
For the Colored Orphan Asylum at <lb />
Oxford. annually for support <lb />
and maintenance. <lb />
For the Appalachian Training <lb />
School at Boone, annually for <lb />
support and maintenance; an- <lb />
for equipment. <lb />
For the Normal and Industrial <lb />
school at <lb />
ally for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for support and main- <lb />
For the Institution for Deaf, Dumb <lb />
and Blind at Raleigh, annual- <lb />
for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for library incidentals. <lb />
For the Hospital for the Colored <lb />
for maintenance; an- <lb />
for improvements. <lb />
For East Carolina Train- <lb />
School at Greenville, an- <lb />
for support and maintenance, <lb />
out of which the present deficit must <lb />
be paid. <lb />
For the Croatan Normal school <lb />
Robeson county, annually , <lb />
support and maintenance; a <lb />
for improvements. <lb />
SOUTHED COM. <lb />
J. S. Carr to Address <lb />
of Welcome. <lb />
By Wire to The Reflector. <lb />
Atlanta, Ga., March third <lb />
annual convention of the Southern <lb />
Commercial Congress opened today. <lb />
Senator Fletcher, of Florida and Sec- <lb />
, Wilson, of the department of <lb />
For the University at Chapel Hill, agriculture, were the principal speak- <lb />
annually for support and today- Governor Brown extended <lb />
welcome and Julian a <lb />
maintenance; annually for <lb />
four years for improvements. <lb />
For the Normal and Industrial Col- <lb />
at Greensboro, annually <lb />
for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for improvement. <lb />
For the College of Agriculture and <lb />
Mechanic Arts at Raleigh, an- <lb />
for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for improvements. <lb />
For the for <lb />
at annually <lb />
for support and maintenance; <lb />
annually for improvements. <lb />
For the Agricultural and Mechanic- <lb />
College, colored, at Greensboro, <lb />
annually for support and <lb />
maintenance; annually for <lb />
For marking graves of Confederate <lb />
dead in cemetery in Raleigh, an- <lb />
To give weaker public schools of <lb />
the State four term <lb />
annually. <lb />
For Guilford Battle Ground, <lb />
annually; annually for erection <lb />
welcome and General Julian S. Carr, <lb />
of North Carolina, responded. <lb />
other speeches by prominent <lb />
business men were made. <lb />
Arguments are never able to con- <lb />
anybody but the fellow who <lb />
makes them. <lb />
WOOD'S HIGH-GRADE <lb />
Farm Seeds, <lb />
We <lb />
race at Goldsboro; annually IT <lb />
for support and maintenance; j <lb />
manually for Improvements Carolina room in the <lb />
For the State hospital at Raleigh, <lb />
annually for support <lb />
maintenance. i . <lb />
Morgan. What a boy wants from his grand- <lb />
ton, annually for and .<lb />
the beat in all Farm seeds. <lb />
Grass and Clover Seeds <lb />
Seed Corn, Cotton Seed, <lb />
Cow Peas, Beans, <lb />
Corn, <lb />
Millet Seed, Peanuts, etc. <lb />
Crop issued <lb />
monthly <lb />
gives timely information as to <lb />
seeds to plant each month in <lb />
the year, also prices of Season- <lb />
able Seeds. Write for copy, <lb />
mailed free on request <lb />
T. W. WOODS SONS, <lb />
Richmond, Va. <lb />
Agriculture is the Most Useful, the Most Healthful, the Most Noble Employment of Washington. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. O, FRIDAY MARCH 1911. <lb />
Number II, <lb />
Where Farmers Fail in Fertilization for Tobacco <lb />
O. L. JOYNER, President Farmers Consolidated Tobacco Company <lb />
There is no one thing that is more <lb />
generally ignored by farmers, or <lb />
treated Indifferently by them, than <lb />
the matter of fertilizing for the to- <lb />
crop, while In reality, there is <lb />
probably no one feature In the grow- <lb />
of tobacco that more import- <lb />
ant. For a long time, our farmers <lb />
used almost exclusively for tobacco <lb />
a brand of fertilizer analyzing 3-8- <lb />
that is to say, a fertilizer con- <lb />
per cent, ammonia, per <lb />
cent phosphoric acid and per cent <lb />
potash, which to be more explicit <lb />
means that in a ton of fertilizer <lb />
containing this analysis there are <lb />
pounds of ammonia, pounds of <lb />
potash and pounds phosphoric <lb />
acid. By actual test, it Is known <lb />
that pounds of tobacco takes <lb />
out of the soil about pounds of <lb />
potash and from to pounds of <lb />
ammonia. Of course, our tobacco <lb />
soils all have a certain amount of <lb />
ammonia and potash, but the <lb />
question for the farmers is <lb />
whether this ammonia and potash <lb />
that is present in the soil, is avail- <lb />
able in sufficient quantities to make <lb />
complete plant food for a growing <lb />
crop of tobacco. Most of our farm- <lb />
use about pounds of <lb />
to tho acre. This means they <lb />
put in pounds of potash and <lb />
pounds of ammonia In commercial <lb />
form. If there is sufficient quantity <lb />
of potash and ammonia available in <lb />
the soil to complete the plant food, <lb />
all well and good, but if not, the re- <lb />
is a poor crop of tobacco, some- <lb />
thing with which a great many of us <lb />
have been afflicted during the last <lb />
few years, and in this connection, <lb />
here, it is not out of place to <lb />
say that no amount of fertilizer is <lb />
going to make a good crop of to- <lb />
when such abnormal seasons <lb />
as we have had in Eastern North <lb />
a for the last few years <lb />
although proper preparation <lb />
will, to a large extent, overcome the <lb />
deficiency in seasons, and will en- <lb />
able the plant to employ the plant <lb />
food put in the land to a much bet- <lb />
advantage. The Important <lb />
however, with farmers is, do <lb />
we use enough ammonia and potash <lb />
in our tobacco fertilizer As a gen- <lb />
rule the answer is <lb />
ably, no. We should therefore use <lb />
fertilizer running higher, especially <lb />
in potash. <lb />
One of the most painstaking and <lb />
intelligent farmers in my knowledge <lb />
Mr. Leon F. Evans, has clearly <lb />
by a series of experiments <lb />
that the use of guano running high <lb />
in sulphate of potash will pay. In <lb />
his tests, he used fertilizer running <lb />
from per cent to per cent potash, <lb />
and from to per cent ammonia. <lb />
From tobacco on which he used <lb />
pounds of fertilizer analyzing per <lb />
cent potash, he sold something over <lb />
worth of tobacco per acre more <lb />
than from the tobacco fertilized <lb />
with 3-8-3, and all the tobacco was <lb />
treated, cultivated, cured and sold <lb />
alike, except in the matter of <lb />
It has been found, very much to <lb />
the disadvantage of our Eastern <lb />
North Carolina tobacco, especially <lb />
that its burning qualities are not as <lb />
good as the burning qualities of the <lb />
old belt tobacco and in a series of <lb />
meetings last fall, held under the <lb />
of the Tobacco As- <lb />
of the States, and <lb />
participated in by Mr. E. H. Matheson <lb />
an expert from the United States De- <lb />
of Agriculture, this import- <lb />
ant matter was urgently called to the <lb />
attention of the farmers. Mr. Mathe- <lb />
son contended that the general use <lb />
by farmers of a fertilizer running <lb />
or per cent in sulphate of potash <lb />
would very materially Improve the <lb />
burning qualities of our tobacco, and <lb />
thus materially add to its value. This <lb />
matter should be seriously considered <lb />
by all our farmers, for while in in- <lb />
instances, may ma- <lb />
add to the money value of <lb />
their crops of tobacco by using more <lb />
potash, yet, to improve the general <lb />
quality of our tobacco, farmers, us a <lb />
whole, must adopt this system of <lb />
fertilizing. <lb />
The use of pounds of <lb />
running per cent sulphate pot- <lb />
ash gives to the tobacco the <lb />
ate use of lbs. of sulphate pot- <lb />
use of pounds of sulphate of pot- <lb />
ash. That soil would therefore have <lb />
to be very deficient In potash content <lb />
that did not yield a good crop of to- <lb />
with pounds of such <lb />
in normal seasons. The serious <lb />
condition and discussion of this <lb />
question will redound to tho <lb />
good of the tobacco farmers. <lb />
A Pointer to Farmers. <lb />
The Sun is always glad to aid the <lb />
farmers and do what it can for their <lb />
advancement and the promotion of <lb />
their Industries and give them a <lb />
greater success. <lb />
Mr. W. C. the buyer for <lb />
the A. T. Company, gives us a hint, <lb />
and we use it in the hope that it will <lb />
be beneficial to the farmers and at <lb />
the same time enable them to real- <lb />
better results from the sale of <lb />
their tobacco. The suggestion is <lb />
Before planting tobacco seed blow <lb />
the carefully to get out the chaff <lb />
or faulty seed, and in this way you <lb />
can rid the planting of seed that will <lb />
make a faulty of tobacco. Or <lb />
else, another way is to put the seed <lb />
in just before planting, and <lb />
this will bring all of the faulty seed <lb />
to the top and can easily be <lb />
The farmers are requested to do <lb />
this before they bow their plant bed, <lb />
and thus improve the next crop. Such <lb />
a precaution has been known to in- <lb />
crease the value of crops In other <lb />
states to a very handsome per cent. <lb />
It is worth Sun. <lb />
The Man Who Helps. <lb />
A town's best asset is a bunch of <lb />
men who have money, enterprise <lb />
public spirit. A man who establish- <lb />
es an enterprise which enables many <lb />
other people to a living while <lb />
he makes something on their labor, <lb />
is a desirable citizen and public <lb />
The man who has a pay- <lb />
roll to meet is not a theoretical but <lb />
a practical Star <lb />
Rotation for Farm Conditions. <lb />
Now is the time to plan crop rota- <lb />
for the farm and while changes <lb />
may be made, if necessary, it will be <lb />
found most satisfactory to lay out <lb />
the fields and plan the crop rotations <lb />
so that there will be system and <lb />
method in the farming operations. <lb />
A lawyer or doctor may spend weeks <lb />
studying one case, why should we <lb />
not put our best though and <lb />
time in planning a rotation of <lb />
crops for the farm Surely the <lb />
of tho matter merits our <lb />
best Farmer. <lb />
Sometimes the harder a man is <lb />
to land the less he pleases the <lb />
who lands him. <lb />
The more talking a man does the <lb />
more denying he has to do. <lb />
Nitrate of Soda for Crops, <lb />
If wheat or oats do not seem <lb />
thrive as they should, it is o good <lb />
practice to apply some nitrate of <lb />
soda. I have used as much as <lb />
pounds an acre on wheat, always <lb />
plying when the leaves are dry, to <lb />
avoid scalding. In one experiment <lb />
I increased the wheat crop nine bush- <lb />
els an acre on part of fie Held with <lb />
an application of of <lb />
nitrate, this part making bushels <lb />
where the rest of the Held made <lb />
bushels, the land being in rather a <lb />
low state of fertility. But followed <lb />
that wheat with peas and gathered <lb />
only the peas, the next season <lb />
that land made a fine corn crop. Could <lb />
have made heavier one had fol- <lb />
lowed the peas with crimson clover, <lb />
but at that time we had not found <lb />
out the value of this clover.- V. <lb />
Massey, in Progressive Farmer, <lb />
HIM <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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